LINGUIST List 35.1104

Sat Mar 30 2024

Calls: Understanding Obviation: a Crosslinguistic Perspective

Editor for this issue: Zackary Leech <zleechlinguistlist.org>

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Date: 29-Mar-2024
From: Anne Bertrand <anne.bertrandmail.mcgill.ca>
Subject: None
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Full Title: Understanding obviation: a crosslinguistic perspective

Date: 04-Oct-2024 - 06-Oct-2024
Location: Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Contact Person: Anne Bertrand
Meeting Email: [email protected]
Web Site: https://obviationworkshop2024.wordpress.com/

Linguistic Field(s): Language Documentation; Morphology; Semantics; Syntax
Subject Language(s): English (eng)

Call Deadline: 15-Apr-2024

Meeting Description:

Obviation is perhaps most commonly discussed in connection with languages of the Algonquian family in which (i) multiple 3rd person nominals in a certain domain must be assigned either proximate or obviative status; (ii) proximate nominals are described as more discourse prominent; (iii) coferential patterns are governed by the proximate-obviative contrast; and (iv) the mapping between proximate and obviative nominals and grammatical function may be signalled on the verb direct and inverse morphemes. Each of these features has factored into definitions of obviation (Aissen 1997, Bliss 2017, Hammerly 2020, Oxford 2017).

A growing body of work has investigated phenomena across unrelated languages which share some or all of the above properties, raising questions about the underlying source and representation of obviation-related phenomena. For instance, Underhill (2021) shows that obviation is not restricted to 3rd person nominals in Ktunaxa, a language isolate spoken in Canada and in the United States. Aissen (1997) and Deal & Royer (2023) also show that Mayan languages, although lacking overt obviation morphology, exhibit obviation-like restrictions on certain combinations of 3rd person arguments in active verb forms. Adopting a crosslinguistic perspective, we aim to understand the relationships among phenomena related to obviation as well as the formal mechanisms underlying them.

This workshop is supported by a SSHRC Insight Grant, The Grammar of Hierarchy Effects. It is organized by project PI Jessica Coon (McGill University) and PhD student Anne Bertrand (UBC & McGill University), and includes the following invited participants:

Invited Participants

Judith Aissen (University of California Santa Cruz)
James Crippen (Co-PI, McGill University)
Amy Rose Deal (University of California Berkeley)
Christopher Hammerly (Co-PI, University of British Columbia)
Stefan Keine (University of California Los Angeles)
Will Oxford (Co-PI, University of Manitoba)
Pedro Mateo Pedro (Co-PI, University of Toronto)
Justin Royer (Co-PI, University of California Berkeley; Université de Montréal)
Sigwan Thivierge (Co-PI, Concordia University)
Rose Underhill (University of British Columbia)

This is a second call for papers for Understanding Obviation

We invite submissions for descriptive and analytical talks on obviation-related phenomena in any language or language family. Talks will be 20 minutes long followed by a 10-minute question period.

Submission guidelines

Abstracts, including the title and all references and data, must not exceed two pages Letter Size or A4
1 inch / 2.54 cm margins on all sides
Times New Roman font, no smaller than 11pt font
Single-spaced
Fully anonymized (in the document properties and the text itself)
PDF format
Abstracts can be submitted by email at [email protected] by April 15th 2024, at 11:59pm anywhere in the world. Please include name and affiliation in the email body.
Understanding obviation
Understanding obviation

Conference website: https://obviationworkshop2024.wordpress.com/




Page Updated: 30-Mar-2024


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