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i-mean 4@ Warwick: Language and Impact

Submitted by Jo Angouri on Fri, 08/31/2018 - 14:49
Category
Date
Thu, 04/09/2015 - Sat, 04/11/2015
Registration deadline

i-mean 4@ Warwick: Language and Impact

09.04.2015-11.04.2015

Abstract Submission Deadline: 31st JAN

University of Warwick

Content
The i-mean 4 conference will address the relationship between language and impact:

‘Impact’ has become a buzz word and is increasingly used as a criterion for decisions on research policy and research funding. The impact of linguistic research has been particularly visible in a number of areas including but not limited to language variation and change, language and politics, language policy and language use, language and identity (e.g. in relation to professional identity, gender, ethnicity or age), corporate and health care discourse, leadership and teamwork and linguistic vitality among others. The impact of the different epistemological and methodological approaches and the impact of the language of impact, however, are more rarely addressed.

I-mean 4 aims to take a critical approach to impact and examine:

-the impact of different theoretical and methodological approaches to the development of the field and certain key topic areas (e.g. language and identity, language and culture, language and meaning),
-the impact of sociopragmatic and discourse analytic research outside academia,
-the impact and application of linguistic methodologies and analyses in social sciences,
-the impact of social interaction on language change synchronically and diachronically.

Invited plenary speakers include:

-Johannes Angermuller, University of Warwick
-Paul Baker, University of Lancaster
-Deborah Cameron, University of Oxford
-Penny Eckert, Stanford University
-Rick Iedema, University of Tasmania
-Klaus Schneider, Bonn University
-Zhu Hua, Birkbeck, University of London

Papers are invited from researchers working across different linguistic fields and traditions, focusing on any aspect of language and impact.

Conference themes:

-The impact of widely used frameworks on the understanding of language use and negotiation of meaning.

-The impact of different methodological approaches to spoken data, including Ethnomethodology, Interactional Sociolinguistics, Conversation Analysis, (Critical) Discourse Analysis, Corpus Linguistics, multivariate analysis, Discourse Completion Tasks, (modified) matched-guise tests and multi-modal analysis.

-The impact of the popularization of the internet on research methodologies, traditions and ethics.

-The impact of globalisation on the study of language and culture.

-The impact of mobility on multilingualism in professional settings.

-The impact of constructionist and post modern approaches on the study of the relationship between language and identity.

-The impact of language and gender studies on the discourses of gender and sexuality.

-The impact of sociopragmatic studies on language teaching and learning.

-The impact of critical approaches on language and politics.

-The impact of language policy on language use.

In line with the i-mean tradition, the conference aims to encourage multidisciplinary thinking and to create new pathways in linguistic research.

The conference will, as usual, include invited colloquia, specialist panels and a round table at which the keynote speakers are invited to debate the conference theme.

Invited Colloquia

I-mean 4 will host two invited colloquia on:

-Language, power and politics at work

-Sociopragmatics and Language Teaching and Learning: Interfaces and Impact

Please see the i-mean pages for details.

Round table: tbc

Organizer

Network University of Warwick
Organizing Committee
Jo Angouri, University of Warwick
Kate Beeching, UWE, Bristol

Contact person: Jo Angouri
email: J.Angouri(at)warwick.ac.uk

Information
Internet address: http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/al/research/conferences/i-mean_4/

Organizer
Jo Angouri
Kate Beeching
Contact person
Jo Angouri