Category Archives: Announcements

Talk 5/4/18 — Lauren Squires

Ph.D. / M.A. Program in Linguistics

Sociolinguistics Lunch Lecture Series – Spring 2018

co-sponsored by DSC & GC Digital Initiatives

Genre, Enregisterment, and Ideological Exceptions:

Experimental Investigations

Lauren Squires
The Ohio State University

This talk will discuss an emerging question in the field of sociolinguistic perception and knowledge: What is the role of context in how linguistic features are processed and perceived? More specifically, I have been exploring how genre influences speakers’ interpretation of the language they encounter. I will discuss experiments that test for genre’s ability to shift linguistic expectations, altering both the orientation to a linguistic task and the processing of linguistic input. I use two case studies, both involving features highly enregistered as parts of specific genres: nonstandard grammatical constructions in pop song lyrics, and abbreviations in social media posts.

Friday, May 4, 2018

2 – 4 PM

Room 8301

All are welcome!  Join us in 7400 for refreshments after the talk!

                  

Conference in Finland, Spring 2019

First Call for Papers

COACT Conference 2019

Interaction and discourse in flux: Changing landscapes of everyday life

University of Oulu, Finland, 24-26 April, 2019

This conference explores how changes in society emerge in interactions and discourses. How do these changes influence, and how are they influenced by, participants in various contexts of work and everyday life? We warmly welcome contributions that outline future trends and present new perspectives on interaction and discourse studies. Presentations may investigate the complexity of different settings, data, methods and theories.

We invite papers and posters from different viewpoints, such as:

– Methodologies in flux: developing and combining different methods and materials, covering also big data and thick data

– Research approaches in flux: reconsidering theories, societal impact of research, researchers’ responsibility in engaging in public discourse

– Technologies in flux: relationships and interactions with, via and within ubiquitous technologies

– Participation in flux: examinations of togetherness, encounters and human sociality in different settings; how access and participation may be redefined, e.g., in working life, education and online environments

The theme can be examined from, but is not restricted to, the following research approaches and strategies: action research, activity theory, content analysis, conversation analysis, cultural-historical activity theory, discourse analysis, ethnography, mediated discourse analysis, multimodal interaction analysis, narrative analysis and nexus analysis.

The invited keynote speakers address the conference theme from their respective viewpoints:

Jon Hindmarsh, King’s College London

Rodney Jones, University of Reading

Leena Kuure, University of Oulu

Paul McIlvenny, Aalborg University

The main language of the conference is English, but presentations in other languages are also welcome.

Important dates:

Submission of abstracts: 19 October 2018

Notifications of acceptance: 30 November 2018

Registration will open in January 2019

Deadline for registration and payment: 28 February 2019

Papers and poster presentations:

The abstracts for both papers and poster presentations are limited to 300 words, including references. The time allotted to section papers will be 20 mins + 10 mins. Posters will be presented during a Poster Walk, which consists of short 5-minute talks followed by commentary and a general discussion.

Please submit your abstract and find more information at the conference website: http://www.oulu.fi/coact/conference2019[oulu.fi]

The conference fee is 80 €. The fee includes lunches and coffees.

Contact

Pentti Haddington (pentti.haddington (at) oulu.fi[oulu.fi]) Tiina Keisanen (tiina.keisanen (at) oulu.fi[oulu.fi])

About COACT

The conference is organized by the research community COACT – “Complexity of (inter)action: Towards an understanding of skilled multimodal participation”, based at the University of Oulu, Finland. Research in COACT focuses on how language and multimodal resources feature in the complexity of social action and interaction, and how social participants skillfully manage and organize their conduct at complex sites of learning, work and everyday life. For more information: http://www.oulu.fi/coact/[oulu.fi]

Organising committee: Pentti Haddington (conference chair), Tiina Keisanen (conference chair), Marika Helisten, Antti Kamunen, Annamari Martinviita, Maritta Riekki, Pauliina Siitonen, Maarit Siromaa, Robin Sokol, Anna Suorsa, Riikka Tumelius, Anna Vatanen

Conference sponsors: research projects HANS (Human Activity in Natural Settings) and iTask (Linguistic and embodied features of interactional multitasking), funded by the Academy of Finland

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Talk: Bodies That Touch and Walk: Some Notes on Gender and Multimodality in Drag King Workshops

Ph.D. / M.A. Program in Linguistics
Sociolinguistics Lunch Lecture Series – Spring 2018


Bodies That Touch and Walk:
Some Notes on Gender and Multimodality
in Drag King Workshops


Luca Greco
University Paris III Sorbonne Nouvelle
 
Based on an ethnography conducted on drag king workshops in Brussels (Belgium) on multimodal construction of queer masculinities in interaction, this presentation will deal with the constitutive role played by touch and walk in the construction and the deconstruction of gender in bodily transformation practices.
 
Drag kings are generally female assigned persons who embody a male character in pursuing a personal desire to explore gender(s), for the sake of performance, and within a political agenda against the binary dimension of gender. Drag king workshops are social occasions in which novices transform their bodies with the help of leaders (particularly those knowledgeable in bodily transformation practices), through the mobilization of specific tactile practices in make-up activities, and through some exercises in which they experiment how to walk in gendered and innovative ways. 
 
My analysis focuses on these two aspects of drag king workshops. It is situated in gender studies inspired by queer and new materialisms perspectives (Butler 1993, Alamo & Hekman 2008, Barad 2012) and in the field of multimodality inspired by the works of Charles and Marjorie Goodwin (2017, 2006). This study aims to show the haptic and mobile dimensions of gender, traditionally neglected in gender and queer studies. Moreover, it proposes to consider multimodal practices as political and artistic ones as they are indexing new ways to consider bodies and genders through the lens of imagination, creativity and improvisation and as they are marked by the bodily experiences of subjects.
 
 
Date: Friday, April 13, 2018    
Time: 2:00 – 4:00 PM                Room: 9207
 

Student conference announcement

Hello Linguistics Department!

We are happy to announce the 13th installment of SQUID: Showcasing Quirky, Unusual Ideas In Development!

It will be held:

Friday, April 27, 2018

10am-5pm

Room: 5414

Keep this date in your calendar!

SQUID is an informal conference held by the Linguistics Program at which students and faculty present twenty-minute talks on a variety of unusual linguistic topics.

Everyone is invited to submit an abstract!  Last year we had an amazing all-day event, and we are hoping to have an even bigger turnout this year!  These talks can be funny or serious, but the general theme is informality. Talks for SQUID are so informal, in fact, that they can easily be put together in under a week. Students who give talks at SQUID get a chance to present in front of peers in a congenial, non-threatening atmosphere. Students who choose to attend (and not to present) get a chance to listen to some really interesting talks and to mingle with fellow linguistics students. Plus, everybody gets to eat fried calamari and drink beer at school.

Please email your abstract–or even just a title!–by Friday, April 13th (spoooooky)  to Cass Lowry at:

[email protected]

We are also in great need of volunteers to assist putting SQUID together on the day of the conference. Please write to Cass if you are interested in assisting with the conference.

Conference announcement: New: Media, Meanings, Messages, E-Motions (U. Penn March 8-10, 2018)

https://www.sla-conference.org/

The theme “New: Media, Messages, Meanings, E-motions” invites thinking through how language and semiosis more broadly are involved in producing new and contingent forms and functions. From thinking about mass media to affective states, from new forms of message to the shifting indexicalities of their meaning, the meetings provide an opportunity to think through how new forms and functions emerge, how participants perceive and describe them, and what kinds of anxieties and possibilities are produced. The terms “media, message, meaning, and e-motion” are meant to suggest possible clusters of analysis to think through how new forms of semiosis emerge, challenge older forms, and show the effects of contingency in social life.