Editor for this issue: Ljuba Veselinova <lveselin
emunix.emich.edu>
Date: 12-14 Octobre 1995 Location: Universite Paris 7 Denis Diderot, Campus Jussieu, 2, place Jussieu, 75005 Paris. Amphitheatre 24 (main courtyard ; left corner opposite to the main entrance) 12 Octobre 9h :Ouverture du colloque par J-C. Milner (Paris 7, CNRS URA 1028) 9h10-10h10 : CONFERENCIER INVITE R. Jackendoff (Brandeis) The Architecture of the Language Faculty SYNTAXE 10h20-10h55 : Caroline Heycock (Edinburgh) & Anthony Kroch (Philadelphia) Pseudocleft Connectivity: Implications for the LF Interface Level 10h55-11h-30 : Paolo Acquaviva (Dublin) Chain Composition and Head-Licensing: Deriving Negative Concord 11h30-12h-05 : Maria-Eugenia Ni=F1o (Stanford) The Multiple Expression of Inflectional Information and Grammatical Architecture 14h-14h35 : Georges Rebuschi (Paris 3) R=E9ciprocit=E9, d=E9pendance fonctionnelle et pronoms de discours 14h35-15h10 : Franz Beil (Stuttgart) Antecedent-Contained Deletion vs. Transitive Verb Phrase Ellipsis 15h10-15h45 : Alexander Grosu & Fred Landman (Tel Aviv) On Third-Kind Relative Constructions 15h45-16h-20 : Fusa Katada (Senshu University) Agglutinative Causatives and Theories of Morphology 16h20-16h55 : Peter Culicover & Robert Levine (Ohio State) On English Stylistic Inversion and the that-trace Effect 17 h : Reception 19h-20h : CONFERENCIER INVITE Joan Bresnan (Stanford) Lexicality and Argument Structure 13 Octobre 9h-10h : CONFERENCIER INVITE David Dowty (Ohio State) The 'swarm' and Middle Alternations, Predicate Meaning Transfers, and Thematic Role Alignment SEMANTIQUE 10h20-10h55 : Maribel Romero (Amherst) Recoverability Conditions for Sluicing 10h55-11h-30 : Hotze Rullmann (Gr=F6ningen) How to Say not even in Dutch 11h30-12h-05 : J=FCrgen Pafel (T=FCbingen) Wh-phrases in the Scope of (Other) Quantifiers ROLES THEMATIQUES 14h-14h35 : Beth Levin (Northwestern) & Malka Rappaport Hovav (Bar Illan) Why Can You Wipe a Slate Clean? 14h35-15h10 : Stella Markantonatou & Louisa Sadler (Essex) Linking Indirect Arguments and Verb Alternations in English 15h10-15h45 : Christopher Manning (Carnegie Mellon) Valency versus Binding: on the Distinctness of Argument Structure 15h45-16h-20 : Elena Anagnostopoulou (Tilburg ) & Martin Everaert (Utrecht) Thematic Hierarchies and Binding Theory: Evidence from Greek 16h40-17h15 : John Moore & Farrell Ackerman (San Diego) Proto-Properties, Grammatical Relations and Case Marking 17h15-17h40 : Rhonna Buchalla (Jerusalem) Acts in an Extended Neo-Davidsonian Framework 17h40-18h15 : Teun Hoekstra (Leiden) Verb Composition, Theta-Role Composition 18h15-18h50 : Paul M. Postal (New York) Two Types of English Object 14 Octobre 9h-10h : CONFERENCIER INVITE Anna Szabolcsi (UCLA) Differential Scope SEMANTIQUE 10h20-10h55 : Craige Roberts (Ohio State) English Prosodic Focus and Information Structure 10h55-11h-30 : Inga Kohlhof (T=FCbingen) The Interacting of Syntax and Discourse Reference in Adverbial Quantification in German 11h30-12h-05 : Rodger Kibble (Edinburgh) Modal Subordination and Complement Anaphora 14h-14h35 : Frank Keller (Edinburgh) Underspecified Presuppositions in HPSG 14h35-15h10 : Michael Johnston (Brandeis) The Telic/Atelic Distinction and the Individuation of Quantificational Domains 15h10-15h45 : Veneeta Dayal (Rutgers) Unexpected Licensing of Any 15h45-16h-20 : Francis Corblin (Rennes 2) & Ivan Derzhanski (Edinburgh) Multiple Negation, Optional Arguments and the Reification of Eventualities 16h40-17h15 : Sandro Zucchi (Cornell) Incomplete Events, Intensionality, and Perfective Aspect 17h15-17h40 : Donka Farkas (Santa Cruz) Reduplicated Indefinites in Hungarian -------------------------------------------------- 2) REGISTRATION PLEASE SEND YOUR REGISTRATION FORM AS SOON AS POSSIBLE Registration fees amount to 250 FF (150F for students). This sum includes the book of abstracts, coffee breaks and participation to the reception on Thursday October 12th. This fee can be paid in cash during the registration sessions: Wednesday, Oct 11th (from 6 to 8 pm) or Thursday 12th (from 8 to 9 am or during the lunch break). If you pay by bank transfer, the processing charges will be on you. The transfer should be made to No 04400405507 (Universite de Paris 7, Agence comptable, CSSP) in RG des Finances de Paris, 19 rue Scribe, 75436 Paris Cedex 09, France. 3) HOTELS Hotel reservations are left to the care of participants. (A) Reservations can be made through a travel agent: Please contact: WAGONLIT EVENEMENT Departement "Congres-Conventions" 50 rue de Londres 75006 PARIS Tel : (33 1) 44 90 33 10 FAX: (33 1) 44 90 33 15 (B) Reservations can be made directly to hotels: -- Hotels located near the site of the conference (5 m' walk to Jussieu): Hotel des Arenes, 51 rue Monge, tel 43 25 09 26, fax: 43 25 79 56. Hotel Residence Monge, 55 rue Monge, tel 43 26 87 90, fax 43 54 47 25. -- Cheap accommodation (subway station: Place d'Italie ; 10 minutes' ride to Jussieu and 5 minutes' walk to China Town): 1. Hotel Coypel, 2 rue Coypel, 75013 Paris. The cheapest (also comfortable): Double (no shower in room) : 155 F (reservation by phone only: 43 31 18 08 and send 155 in cheque (eurocheque for foreigners)) 2. Pacific Hotel, 8 rue Philippe de Champagne, 75013 Paris. Cheap (clean, most rooms are quiet): Single (no shower in room): 170 F Double (no shower in room): 220 F Double (shower + wc in room): 250 F Reservation by phone or fax (same number): 43 31 17 06. 3. Hotel Le Brun, 33 rue le Brun, 75013 Paris. (most rooms are remodeled): Double (no shower): 192 F Double (with shower + wc) : 263 F. Reservation by phone: 47 07 97 02 or fax: 43 36 23 45. 4) ADRESSE DU COLLOQUE Colloque de Syntaxe et Semantique de Paris Universite Paris 7 UFRL, case 7003 2 place Jussieu 75251 Paris Paris Cedex 05. email: cssp95Mail to author|Respond to list|Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issuelinguist.jussieu.fr REGISTRATION FORM ; To be returned as soon as possible. NOM, NAME : ...................................................................... PRENOM, FIRST NAME : ................................................................... ORGANISME, AFFILIATION : ................................................................ ADRESSE, ADDRESS : .................................................................. TELEPHONE : ................................ E-MAIL : ................................... DROIT D'INSCRIPTION, REGISTRATION FEE: 250 FF (STUDENT: 150 FF) PAIEMENT, PAYMENT (Please tick your choice): - liquide, cash : - cheque (only for French participants): - bank transfer:
UNITY AND DIVERSITY THE FOURTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON NARRATIVE October 13 - 15, 1995 and PRECONFERENCE WORKSHOP ON QUALITATIVE COMPUTING October 12, 1995 PROGRAM College of Communications and Information Studies University of Kentucky Lexington, Kentucky 18th Floor, Patterson Office Tower Welcome Welcome to the Fourth International Conference on Narrative: Unity and Diversity! This yearUs program is dedicated to the exploration of what unites and differentiates us as theorists, methodologists, and, of course, as narrators. Please keep open next yearUs second October weekend, too, and tell all your colleagues about your experience. Announcements will come via NARRATE. You can subscribe to this network by sending the command _subscribe narrate firstname lastname_ to listservMail to author|Respond to list|Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issueukcc.uky.edu. Joachim Knuf Location All programs will take place on the 18th floor of the Patterson Office Tower, located centrally on the University of Kentucky campus. Sessions Please plan on 15 to 20 minutes for your presentations. This will allow about half an hour for questions and discussion per session. VCRs and overhead projectors will be available. If you need special equipment, please let me know by October 1. Parking Parking is available beginning Friday at 8:30 at the College View Parking lot behind Memorial Coliseum. Only the northern part of the lot, between College View Avenue and Maxwell Street, will be open. No stickers are needed. Separate parking arrangements will be made for participants in the Thursday workshop. Registration If you have not already pre-registered at the reduced rate, the registration desk on the 18th floor of the Patterson Office Tower will be open Friday and Saturday from 8:30 to 1:00. The prepaid registration fee of $60.00 includes box lunches, refreshments, and a subscription to the conference volume. A reduced prepaid registration fee of $20.00 is available for students and the unwaged. It includes refreshments, but neither box lunches nor the conference volume; additional subscriptions are $25.00. After September 15, 1995, the regular registration fee will be $70.00, the student registration $25.00. All-Day Pre-Conference Workshop On Qualitative Computing, Thursday, October 12, 1995 Learn from Lyn Richards, co-author of NUD%IST, the leading software package for the analysis of nonnumerical, unstructured data in qualitative research. This workshop will be conducted on Power Macintosh machines running either Macintosh, Windows, or DOS operating systems. Demonstration programs will be available to participants. Arrangements are being made to have copies of the software available at reduced prices at the conference. The registration fee of $120.00 for this workshop includes lunch. Please reserve your seat early, as the number of participants is limited! Lodging Blocks of hotel rooms have been reserved at two hotels: THE SPRINGS INN, 2020 Harrodsburg Road, Lexington, KY 40503. For reservations please call toll-free: 1-800-354-9503; FAX: (606) 277- 3142; TEL: (606) 277-5751. Room rates (excluding tax) for a single are $35.00, for a double, $44.00. Additional occupants are $4.00. The cut-off date for reservations at this preferred rate is September 11, 1995. FRENCH QUARTER SUITES HOTEL, 2601 Richmond Road, Lexington, KY 40509. For reservations please call toll-free: 1-800-262-3774 or (606) 268-0060; FAX: (606) 268-6209. The suite rate (excluding tax) for single or double occupancy is $89.00, which includes two breakfast coupons. Additional occupants are $10.00. The cut-off date for reservations at this preferred rate is September 15, 1995. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1995 9:00 - 1:00 REGISTRATION - COFFEE 10:00 - 10:30 Boardroom 1 WELCOME 10:30 - 11:45 Boardroom 1 PANEL 1: ORGANIZATIONAL MATTERS Geoff Drummond Organization Behaviour, Swinbourne University, Australia _Organization as text: Management in recession_ Katherine Burnett Meidlinger and Stephanie Zimmermann Department of Communication Studies, San Jos State University, USA _Myths, legends, and fantasies: The organizational stories of a parish staff_ Joy Hart, Shirley Willihnganz, and Greg Leichty Department of Communication, University of Louisville _Work life and worker perceptions: Organizational narrative and change_ 10:30 - 11:45 Boardroom 2 PANEL 2: INTERVENTIONS Adrienne Chambon Faculty of Social Work, University of Toronto, Canada _Strategies of telling and talking in the therapeutic dialogue_ Kathleen Dine-Young Harvard Community Health Plan, Braintree, MA, USA _Narratives of the future: The miracle question in psychotherapy_ Michelle H. Mamberg Department of Psychology, Clark University, USA MULTIPLE PERSONALITY DISORDER NARRATIVES: PSYCHOLOGISTS' assumptions of a Unifying self_ 12:00 - 1:00 Foyer LUNCH 1:00 - 2:15 Boardroom 1 PANEL 3: AUTHORITIES AND RESISTANCES Lisa Comparini and William R. Penuel Frances L. Hiatt School of Psychology, Clark University, USA _The authority of narrative discourse in youth work_ Marta Pelusi Department of Psychology, Clark University, USA _Resisting and assimilating symbolic representations of identity: Complementing and extending the bounds of narrative analysis_ Chris Wood Foreman Department of Communication and Theatre Arts, Eastern Michigan University, USA _The hunt for resistance narratives: Identifying and analyzing narratives of resistance to domination in organizations_ 1:00 - 2:15 Boardroom 2 PANEL 4: SPECTATORSHIP Stephen Dine-Young Department of Psychology, Clark University, USA _The movies in our lives: Autobiographical narratives about a narrative medium_ H. J. Groenewald Department of Communication, Potchefstroom University, Republic of South Africa _Ubuntu and intercultural communication in South Africa in the CONTEXT OF 'SARAFINA'_ Marc Porter Department of Mass Communication, The University of Charleston, USA _Belizaire the Cajun as a narrative of the self_ 2:30 - 3:45 Boardroom 1 THEORY ROUNDTABLE Moderator: Joachim Knuf Department of Communication, University of Kentucky, USA 4:00 - 5:15 Boardroom 1 PANEL 5: GENRES Elizabeth Hansen Department of Mass Communications, Eastern Kentucky University, USA Gary L. Hansen Department of Sociology, University of Kentucky, USA _Hubby kills wife over toothpaste: Tales of violence in supermarket tabloids_ Siegfried E. Heit Department of Humanities and Philosophy, University of Central Oklahoma, USA _Beasts in the tales of the Brothers Grimm_ Warren S. Smith-Werner Department of Foreign Languages and Literature, University of New Mexico, USA _The satiric voice in the Roman novelistic tradition_ 4:00 - 5:15 Boardroom 2 PANEL 6: WOMENUS STORIES Valerie M. Crawford Frances L. Hiatt School of Psychology, Clark University, USA _Stories among 13-year-old girls: Positioning the self in a gendered social space_ Nancy Johnson Smith Department of Psychology, University of Calgary, Canada _Unity and diversity in young womenUs narratives regarding the development of their occupational aspirations: An initial analysis_ Phyllis Aileen Department of Educational Policy Studies and Evaluation, University of Kentucky, USA _ETIOLOGY OF SILENCE: SECRECY OR SOLITUDE. SEVEN WOMEN'S STORIES_ 5:30 - 6:00 Boardroom 1 PERFORMANCE Gurney M. Norman Department of English, University of Kentucky, USA _Appalachian stories_ SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1995 8:30 - 1:00 Foyer REGISTRATION - COFFEE 9:00 - 11:00 Boardroom 1 PANEL 7: STUDIES OF NATURALISTIC NARRATIVE TALK Bethany K. Dumas The University of Tennessee, USA _Simple and complex narratives in spoken discourse: Deja Vu all over again?_ Kathleen C. Haspel School of Communication, Information and Library Studies, Rutgers University, USA _Dominant narratives vs. diverse viewpoints: Alignment practices and the process of participation in talk radio_ Carolyn Taylor Department of Speech Communication, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA _Unity and diversity across narrative types: Re-visiting Labov and Waletzky, re-defining narrative_ Galina Y. Zeigarnik Psychology Department, Clark University, USA _Using narratives to specify word-meanings in arguments_ Leslie Jarmon Department of Speech Communication, University of Texas at Austin, USA _Fluid perspectivity: Narrator as shape-shifter_ 9:00 - 11:00 Boardroom 2 PANEL 8: NARRATIVE OF/ON PEDAGOGY JOSE FERREIRA-ALVES Institute of Education and Psychology, University of Minho, Portugal _The narrative as a foundation of teacher education and development_ Paula Kalaja DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH, UNIVERSITY OF JYVASKYLA, FINLAND Hannele Dufva LANGUAGE CENTER FOR FINNISH UNIVERSITIES, UNIVERSITY OF JYVASKYLA, Finland _The life of every (foreign) language teacher is worth writing about_ Wilma Romatz Mott Community College, USA _Some implications of narrative theory in the teaching of writing_ MaryAnn K. Crawford Writing Center, Michigan State University, USA _In the presence of others: The role of reported speech in narratives of learning_ Chao-chih Liao Section of Foreign Languages and Literature, Feng Chia University _Different ways of narrative and value systems of Chinese university students from four areas in the world_ 11:15 - 12:15 Boardroom 1 PANEL 9: THE MATTER OF METAPHOR Diane S. Grimes Department of Communication, Purdue University, USA _'JUST SENSELESS' OR 'JUST A PHASE': METAPHOR IN THE representations of student protesters in two university histories_ Anne Marie Werner-Smith CIMTE Department, University of New Mexico, USA _Metaphorical images within the context of the interview narrative_ 11:15 - 12:15 Boardroom 2 PANEL 10: NARRATIVES AND AUDIENCES Claude Martin DEPARTEMENT DE COMMUNICATION, UNIVERSITE DE MONTREAL, CANADA _Best-selling narratives in Quebec_ Amy Carrell Department of English, University of Central Oklahoma, USA _Rewriting the old tales: Audience considerations_ 12:15 - 1:00 Foyer LUNCH 1:00 - 2:00 Boardroom 1 PANEL 11: GRICEAN WORK Sara Gesuato Department of Linguistics,University of California at Berkeley, USA _How to pretend things with words: Violation of Gricean Cooperative Principle as a device to undermine the credibility of fictional characters_ Richard M. Henry Ramsey, MN, USA _Toward a theory of narrational implicature: Implicating Gaddis_ 1:00 - 2:00 Boardroom 2 PANEL 12: INTERPERSONAL CONSTRUCTION OF IDENTITIES (1): LITERATURE Rebecca L. Wheeler Department of English, Ball State University, USA _TEXTRESS: NARRATIVE SEDUCTION IN RICHARDSON'S PAMELA_ Trey Strecker Department of English, Ball State University, USA _WOMEN AND COYOTES: URSULA K. LEGUIN'S ALWAYS COMING HOME, AN archaeology of the future_ 2:00 - 2:30 Foyer COFFEE BREAK 2:30 - 3:30 Boardroom 1 KEYNOTE ADDRESS Walter R. Fisher Annenberg School for Communication, University of Southern California, USA _Unity and diversity in and through narrative_ 3:45 - 5:30 Boardroom 1 PANEL 13: READING(S) Madeline M. Maxwell Department of Speech Communication, University of Texas at Austin, USA _Blending languages and narrative structures to sign with books_ Paul Turpin Annenberg School for Communication, University of Southern California, USA _Reading as self-persuasion: Understanding rhetorical topoi as narrative elements_ Michael Shelton Department of Communication, University of Kentucky _The soft side: An alternative to quantification as a unifying theme for narrative scholarship_ Joachim Knuf Department of Communication, University of Kentucky, USA _Duckburg city limits: Narrative autonomy and the pragmatics of reading English and German Disney comics_ 3:45 - 5:30 Boardroom 2 PANEL 14: INTERPERSONAL CONSTRUCTION OF IDENTITIES (2): INTERACTIONS Fulvia Quilici-Matteucci Department of Psychology, Clark University, USA _A dramatistic approach to the study of discourse on pregnancy within mother-daughter relationships_ Mary E. Smith Department of Speech Communication, University of Texas at Austin _Adult development: The impact of parent-child interactions_ Ellen L. Barton Department of English, Wayne State University, USA Ruth E. Ray Institute of Gerontology, Wayne State University, USA _Narratives of identity and stigma_ Henry P. Cole Behavioral Research Aspects of Safety and Health (BRASH) Working Group, University of Kentucky _Promoting safety through interactive narrative: Theory, methods, and results_ 5:45 - 7:00 Boardroom 1 METHODOLOGY ROUNDTABLE Moderator: Joachim Knuf Department of Communication, University of Kentucky, USA SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1995 8:30 - 9:00 Foyer REGISTRATION - COFFEE 9:00 - 10:00 Boardroom 1 PANEL 15: THE MEDIA AND THE PUBLIC James K. Hertog School of Journalism and Telecommunications, University of Kentucky, USA _The visual rhetoric of objectivity: Balance and neutrality in a televised debate_ Eugene McCann Department of Geography, University of Kentucky, USA _The institutional narrative of urban development and community_ 9:00 - 10:00 Boardroom 2 PANEL 16: INTERACTIVELY CONSTRUCTED NARRATIVE Cecile Blanche Communication Arts Department, Villanova University, USA _Social support narratives in an urban setting_ Jerry Gale, John Lawless, and Rick Scott Department of Child and Family Development, The University of Georgia, USA and Mark Huber Department of Management, The University of Georgia, USA _Computer-facilitated group dialogues: Many voices, one narrative_ 10:15 - 11:15 Boardroom 1 PANEL 17: CONSTRUCTING CULTURAL IDENTITIES Jeanelle Barrett Department of English, Purdue University, USA _EXAMINING TWAIN'S SHORT STORIES: THE UNITY AND DIVERSITY OF Southern dialect_ Ashwini Tambe Department of Communication, The Ohio State University, USA _Travel-talk: U.S. tourists recounting their Third World experiences_ 10:15 - 11:15 Boardroom 2 PANEL 18: HEROES AND VILLAINS Ralph E. Hanson P. I. Reed School of Journalism, West Virginia University, USA Conrad Smith Department of Journalism, The Ohio State University, USA _'AND THEN HELL CAUGHT UP W'TH USU: HEROIC NARRATIVES OF THE SOUTH Canyon fire_ B. Keith Murphy Department of Communication, Indiana University - Purdue University Fort Wayne, USA _Adversary: The villain as defining moment in comic book narrative_ 11:30 - 12:30 Boardroom 1 PANEL 19: INDIA - USA Geralyn Strecker Department of English, Ball State University, USA _'THE CHUTNIFICATION OF HISTORY': PRESERVING A (RE)MEMBERED PAST AS SATIRE IN SALMAN RUSHDIE'S MIDNIGHT'S CHILDREN_ Anjali Ram and Susan Hafen School of Interpersonal Communication, Ohio University, USA _Narratives from the diaspora: (Re)presenting race, class, and gender in Mississippi Masala and Bhaji on the Beach_ 12:30 - 1:00 Boardroom 1 WARM FUZZIES, POSTMORTEMS, GOOD-BYES