LINGUIST List 22.1859
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Wed Apr 27 2011
Confs: Applied Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, Sociolinguitics/USA
Editor for this issue: Di Wdzenczny
<di linguistlist.org>
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LINGUIST is pleased to announce the launch of an exciting new feature: Easy Abstracts! Easy Abs is a free abstract submission and review facility designed to help conference organizers and reviewers accept and process abstracts online. Just go to: http://www.linguistlist.org/confcustom, and begin your conference customization process today! With Easy Abstracts, submission and review will be as easy as 1-2-3!
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Directory
1. Lynnette Arnold ,
Language, Interaction, & Social Organization Conference
Message 1: Language, Interaction, & Social Organization Conference
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Date: 26-Apr-2011
From: Lynnette Arnold <lynnettearnold umail.ucsb.edu>
Subject: Language, Interaction, & Social Organization Conference
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Language, Interaction, & Social Organization Conference Short Title: LISO Date: 12-May-2011 - 14-May-2011 Location: Santa Barbara, CA, USA Contact: Alex Wahl Contact Email: lisoconference gmail.com Meeting URL: http://ucsblisoconference.org Linguistic Field(s): Anthropological Linguistics; Discourse Analysis; Sociolinguistics Meeting Description: The 17th Annual Conference on Language, Interaction, and Social Organization University of California, Santa Barbara May 12-14, 2011 The LISO conference promotes interdisciplinary research and discussion in the analysis of naturally occurring human interaction. Papers will be presented by national and international scholars on a variety of topics in the study of language, interaction, and culture. The papers primarily employ analysis of naturally occurring data drawing from methodologies that include conversation analysis, discourse analysis, ethnographic methods, ethnomethodology, interactional linguistics, and interactional sociolinguistics. Presented by: The Language, Interaction, and Social Organization (LISO) Graduate Student Organization at UCSB & The Center for Language, Interaction and Culture (CLIC) Graduate Student Association at UCLA Plenary Speakers: Virginia Teas Gill Illinois State University Sociology Julia Menard-Warwick University of California, Davis Linguistics Jennifer Roth-Gordon University of Arizona Anthropology Fourth Plenary Speaker TBA Thursday, May 12, 2011 [all events held in the McCune Conference Room, 6020 HSSB] Please Note: Thursday's Workshop Events are open to graduate students only. 12pm-1pm Registration Workshop Session 1pm-2pm Workshop with Virginia Gill, Illinois State University 2pm-3pm Workshop with Alexandra Jaffe, California State University, Long Beach 3:00pm-3:15pm Break 3:15pm-4:15pm Workshop with Julia Menard-Warwick, University of California, Davis 4:15pm-5:15pm Workshop with Jennifer Roth-Gordon, University of Arizona Friday, May 13, 2011 [unless otherwise noted, all events will be held in the McCune Conference Room, 6020 HSSB] 8am-9am Breakfast and Registration Morning Session 9am-9:30am Evelyn Dean-Olmsted, Indiana University Coffee grounds and arabismos: (Post)vernacular stances toward Syrian jewish language and culture in a young woman's card game 9:30am-10am Netta Avineri, UCLA Socializing Yiddish metalinguistic community members through the embodied construction of Yiddish source languages as 'resources' or 'rivals' 10am-10:30am Lynnette Arnold, UC Santa Barbara 'Getting your hands dirty': Participation in ideology and interaction at a community bike shop 10:30am-10:45am Coffee Break 10:45am-11:15am Susan W. Woolley, UC Berkeley Teasing, jokes, and power: Language socialization of gender and sexuality norms 11:15am-12:15pm Plenary Speaker Jennifer Roth-Gordon, University of Arizona A Modern Blackness: Race, Language, and the Body in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 12:15pm-1:30pm Lunch Break Afternoon Session 1:30pm-2pm Steven P. Black, UCLA/UC San Diego Noun classes, click consonants and HIV/AIDS stigma in South Africa 2pm-2:30pm Catherine E. Travis, University of New Mexico Rena Torres-Cacoullos, Pennsylvania State University On the role of stressed I in interaction 2:30pm-3pm Jaime Snyder, Syracuse University Image-making as discourse strategy 3pm-3:15pm Coffee Break 3:15pm-3:45pm Tessa van Charldorp, VU University Amsterdam 'You asked me what happened last night': A comparison between first story solicitations in police interrogations and the text in the police records 3:45pm-4:15pm Hye Ri Stephanie Kim, UCLA Retrospective marking of a prior action as preliminary: A comparative perspective 4:15pm-5:15pm Plenary Speaker Virginia Teas Gill, Illinois State University Resources for managing response relevance: The case of patients' explanations for illness and doctors' responses 5:15pm-5:30pm Break 5:30pm-8pm Dinner (Included in registration) Location: GSA Lounge Saturday, May 14, 2011 [unless otherwise noted, all events will be held in the McCune Conference Room, 6020 HSSB] 8am-9am Registration Morning Session 9am-9:30am Hsin-Fu Chiu, UCLA Approaching authority and hierarchy in Chinese heritage family interation 9:30am-10am Ishita Mishra, Nottingham Trent University 'Ethnic' identity in Anglo-South Asian dyadic discourse 10am-10:30am Sonya Pritzker, UCLA English is the language I'll be using: Participation, evidence, and authority in the translation of Chinese medicine 10:30am-10:45am Coffee Break 10:45am-11:15am Merav Shohet, UCLA Materializing sacrifice through language and embodied action across generations in Vietnam 11:15am-12:15pm Plenary Speaker Julia Menard-Warwick, UC Davis Language ideologies and cultural identities in English Language Teaching 12:15pm-1:30pm Lunch Break Afternoon Data Sessions *Concurrent sessions will be running for the remainder of Saturday afternoon Session 1 [McCune Conference Room] [6020 HSSB] 1:30pm-2pm Jorg Zinken, University of Portsmouth The material environment for imperative turns 2pm-2:30pm Rika Yamashita, University of Tokyo/JSPS (Japan Society for the Promotion of Science)/Birkbeck College, University of London In linguistic control, in pedagogic control? Repetitions in teacher-pupil multilingual conversation in South Asian Muslim community classroom in Tokyo suburbs 2:30pm-3pm Emily E. Crutcher UC Santa Barbara 'It sounds like she's totally faking': Assessments of the authenticity of female pleasure in pornography Session 2 [IHC Research Seminar Room] [6056 HSSB] 1:30pm-2pm Jeremy Kelley, UCLA The dialogic organization of multimodal stance in gay men's interactions 2pm-2:30pm Jessica S. Robles, University of Colorado at Boulder Interactional resources for intersubjective relating: Talk, embodiment, and morality in family conversations 2:30pm-3pm Nicholas Williams, University of Colorado at Boulder Placeholder demonstratives and word search in Indonesian conversation 3pm-3:15pm Coffee Break Session 1 [McCune Conference Room] [6020 HSSB] 3:15pm-3:45pm Brendan H. O'Connor, University of Arizona Making an impact: Meta-knowledge, scientific authority, and rights to speak in a high school astronomy classroom 3:45pm-4:15pm Joshua Raclaw, University of Colorado at Boulder Affiliative and epistemic functions of turn- initial 'no' Session 2 [IHC Research Seminar Room] [6056 HSSB] 3:15pm-3:45pm Melanie McComsey, UC San Diego Bilingual resourses for talk about space: Evidence from Spanish and Juchità ¡n Zapotec 3:45pm-4:15pm Seyda Tarim, UC Santa Barbara Turkish Immigrant Children's Bilingual Practices 4:15pm-5:15pm Plenary Speaker Alexandra Jaffe, California State University, Long Beach Stance, Indeterminacy and Ideological Process: Structuration in the Indexical Field ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This Year the LINGUIST List hopes to raise $67,000. This money will go to help keep the List running by supporting all of our Student Editors for the coming year. See below for donation instructions, and don't forget to check out Fund Drive 2011 site! http://linguistlist.org/fund-drive/2011/ There are many ways to donate to LINGUIST! You can donate right now using our secure credit card form at https://linguistlist.org/donation/donate/donate1.cfm Alternatively you can also pledge right now and pay later. To do so, go to: https://linguistlist.org/donation/pledge/pledge1.cfm For all information on donating and pledging, including information on how to donate by check, money order, or wire transfer, please visit: http://linguistlist.org/donation/ The LINGUIST List is under the umbrella of Eastern Michigan University and as such can receive donations through the EMU Foundation, which is a registered 501(c) Non Profit organization. Our Federal Tax number is 38- 6005986. These donations can be offset against your federal and sometimes your state tax return (U.S. tax payers only). For more information visit the IRS Web-Site, or contact your financial advisor. Many companies also offer a gift matching program, such that they will match any gift you make to a non-profit organization. Normally this entails your contacting your human resources department and sending us a form that the EMU Foundation fills in and returns to your employer. This is generally a simple administrative procedure that doubles the value of your gift to LINGUIST, without costing you an extra penny. Please take a moment to check if your company operates such a program. Thank you very much for your support of LINGUIST!
This Year the LINGUIST List hopes to raise $67,000. This money will go to help
keep the List running by supporting all of our Student Editors for the coming year.
See below for donation instructions, and don't forget to check out Fund
Drive 2011 site!
http://linguistlist.org/fund-drive/2011/
There are many ways to donate to LINGUIST!
You can donate right now using our secure credit card form at
https://linguistlist.org/donation/donate/donate1.cfm
Alternatively you can also pledge right now and pay later. To do so, go to:
https://linguistlist.org/donation/pledge/pledge1.cfm
For all information on donating and pledging, including information on how to
donate by check, money order, or wire transfer, please visit:
http://linguistlist.org/donation/
The LINGUIST List is under the umbrella of Eastern Michigan University and as
such can receive donations through the EMU Foundation, which is a registered
501(c) Non Profit organization. Our Federal Tax number is 38-6005986. These
donations can be offset against your federal and sometimes your state tax return
(U.S. tax payers only). For more information visit the IRS Web-Site, or contact
your financial advisor.
Many companies also offer a gift matching program, such that they will match
any gift you make to a non-profit organization. Normally this entails your
contacting your human resources department and sending us a form that the
EMU Foundation fills in and returns to your employer. This is generally a simple
administrative procedure that doubles the value of your gift to LINGUIST, without
costing you an extra penny. Please take a moment to check if your company
operates such a program.
Thank you very much for your support of LINGUIST!
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