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30th European Systemic Functional Linguistics Conference "Social Semiotics & Social Justice"

Enviado por Nick Moore el Vie, 01/11/2019 - 11:20
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Mié, 07/01/2020 - Vie, 07/03/2020
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Sheffield Institute of Education
Sheffield Hallam University
Sheffield
S1 1WB
Reino Unido

30th European Systemic Functional Linguistics Conference: "Social Semiotics and Social Justice"

Sheffield Hallam University, Sheffield, U.K. 1st to 3rd July, 2020

 

Call for Papers

Calls for greater social justice appear to be ignored in an age of increasing economic inequality (Piketty & Goldhammer, 2014), particularly in many of the leading and growing economies around the world where we find the rising forces of nationalism and xenophobia, climate change denial and the normalisation of radical right-wing ideologies. At the same time, the recognition of the key role that language plays in establishing and maintaining relations of power has never been greater, with discourse now recognised in popular culture and in a range of disciplines as a major force in social change. The need to apply the analysis of discourse and other forms of meaning-making to the improvement of social justice has never been more urgent.

Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL) has a long tradition of analysing language with the aim of reducing social inequity, reaching back to one of its original aims of promoting linguistic equality (Halliday, 2015). The analytical toolbox offered by SFL has been instrumental in establishing reliable frameworks of analysis in critical discourse analysis, in multimodal semiotics and in educational linguistics.  Consequently, in recent years we have exponentially improved our ability to identify how meaning-making resources are deployed in written, spoken, visual and multi-channel modalities across a range of contexts, often with the aim of exposing hegemonic power structures. For instance, SFL has had a significant impact on narrowing the attainment gap for children in schools combining functional grammar with social realism in order to expose how the language of schooling works to the advantage of dominant social groups (Rose & Martin, 2012).

This conference aims to explore the many ways that language and other modes of meaning-making play an integral role in preventing or promoting social justice. The conference expects SFL and associated disciplines to bring diverse perspectives to bear on the understanding, intervention and disruption of embedded power relations and ideologies through the analysis of semiotic processes. We especially welcome papers that connect the theme to these areas of research:

•       Multimodality and social semiotics

•       Critical & positive discourse analysis

•       Appliable linguistics

•       Political economy & social structure

•       Education & applied linguistics

We also welcome other papers that relate to the theme of 'Social Semiotics and Social Justice' and as always we aim to provide a forum for all SFL research. Our experienced scientific committee will review submissions for 1-hour workshops, single-themed symposia with multiple speakers, and 30-minute talks (including up to 10 minutes for questions & discussion).

 

References

Halliday, M.A.K. (2015) The Influence of Marxism. In J. Webster (Ed.) The Bloomsbury Companion to M.A.K. Halliday. London: Bloomsbury

Piketty, T. & Goldhammer, A. (2014). Capital in the Twenty-first Century. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Rose, D. & Martin, J.R. (2012) Learning to Write, Reading to Learn. Sheffield: Equinox

 

Submissions can be classified within one or more of these strands:

 

·         Advances in SFL research

·         Advances in SFL theory

·         Analysis of political discourse

·         Applied & Appliable linguistics

·         Critical &/or Positive Discourse Analysis

·         Discourse analysis

·         Ecolinguistics

·         Education & pedagogy, including multi-literacies

·         Legitimation Code Theory

·         Multimodality

·         Political economy

·         Synthesis of SFL with other approaches

 

 

Key dates:

Call for Papers:                          01 Nov 2019

Submission opens:                 15 Nov 2019

Submission deadline:             10 Jan 2020

Registration opens:                 10 Feb 2020

Notification of decision:        14 Feb 2020

Registration ends:                   07 Jun 2020

Conference starts:                 01 Jul 2020

 

Information & Contacts:

Conference email:                           esflc2020@shu.ac.uk

Conference Twitter page:            @esflc2020

Conference Website:                     https://www.esflc2020.org.uk/

 

Organizer
Nick Moore
Institución
Sheffield Hallam University
Dirección de contacto
esflc2020@shu.ac.uk
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