Home | Pre-Recorded Talks | Live Discussion Schedule | Registration
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Monday, 12 July 2021
Note: All times are British Summer Time (GMT+1); A Zoom link will be sent out to registered participants on the night before the event.
11.30-12.00 Welcome and Registration
Johannes Angermuller, Michael Kranert, Md Shajedur Rahman and Jaspal Naveel Singh
12.00-12.45 Live Talk
Quentin Williams, University of the Western Cape, South Africa
The hate they give Coloured English
13.00-14.30 Parallel Discussion Panels
Format of discussion panels: Presenters give 5 min overview of main points/argument + Respondents give 5 min response + Audience discusses for 5 mins + Invited discussant gives 20 min commentary + Audience discusses for 10-30 mins.
1A: Counter-hegemonic discourses (Discussant: Quentin Williams)
Dripta Piplai (Mondal), Lekshmi Rekha, Suma Chisti, Abhijith N Arjunan – The heterogeneity question in post-independence India (Respondent: Dimitris Trimithiotis)
Dimitris Trimithiotis – Greek Cypriot dialect (Respondent: Ariella Lahav)
Ariella Lahav – A rhetoric of love as used by Israeli opposition leader aspiring to become Prime Minister (Respondent: Jaspal Naveel Singh)
Crispin Thurlow – Besides hegemonic multilingualism (Respondent: Dripta Piplai (Mondal))
1B: Populism (Discussant: Benno Herzog)
Michael Kranert – Populist linguistic nationalism (Respondent: Carlos Ahuactzin)
Carlos Ahuactzin and Enrique Matrínez – Political narrative and populism in Mexico (Respondent: Alexander Alekseev)
Alexander Alekseev – Language of human rights and (changing) political discourse of the populist radical right (Respondent: Dani Heffernan)
Dani Heffernan – Asking too much of ‘the people’ (Respondent: Michael Kranert)
1C: Minoritising languages (Discussant: Isabelle Léglise)
Deepa Vanjani – The politics of language minoritisation (Respondent: Stuart Dunmore)
Stuart Dunmore – Gaelic in North America (Respondent: Beatriz Hermida Ramos)
Beatriz Hermida Ramos – Language ideologies, Galician and the Spanish state in the context of late capitalism (Respondent: Anna Augustyniak)
Anna Augustyniak – Space, scale and identity among migrant learners of Basque (Respondent: Deepa Vanjani)
14.30-15.00 Break and Networking
A link to Wonder will be sent out to all registered participants on the night before the event.
15.00-15.45 Live Talk
Isabelle Léglise, CNRS Paris, France
Geopolitics and circulation of knowledge in the fields of multilingualism and education
15.45-16.00 Networking
A link to Wonder will be sent out to all registered participants on the night before the event.
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Tuesday, 13 July 2021
Note: All times are British Summer Time (GMT+1); A Zoom link will be sent out to registered participants on the night before the event.
12.00-12.45 Live Talk
Johannes Angermuller, The Open University
Does English turn us into white nationalists?
13.00-14.30 Parallel Discussion Panels
Format of discussion panels: Presenters give 5 min overview of main points/argument + Respondents give 5 min response + Audience discusses for 5 mins + Invited discussant gives 20 min commentary + Audience discusses for 10-30 mins.
2A: English as a neoliberal language (Discussant: Kristina Hultgren)
Gonzalo Pérez Andrade – “British English is much more prestigious. Everybody knows that!” (Respondent: Katy Highet)
Katy Highet – “We are in English-medium right but still we are Indian” (Respondent: Yonatan Puón Castro)
Yonatan Puón Castro – Mexico’s foreign language policy (Respondent: Maybritt Woodcock)
Maybritt Woodcock – Language policies, practices and their effects on human trafficking survivors in England (Respondent: Gonzalo Pérez Andrade)
2B: Political discourse online (Discussant: Jan Krasni)
Rashid Mustafin and Valery Shulginov – Speech aggression and ideology in Internet communication (Respondent: Olivia Inwood)
Olivia Inwood – Analysing affiliation and legitimation in conspiratorial discourse (Respondent: Daniel Leisser)
Daniel Leisser – Law, order and the Corona crisis in right-wing discourse (Respondent: Olga Malysheva)
Olga Malysheva, Natalia Ryabchenko and Gnedash Anna – Networked populism (Respondent: Rashid Mustafin)
14.30-15.00 Networking
A link to Wonder will be sent out to all registered participants on the night before the event.
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Wednesday, 14 July 2021
Note: All times are British Summer Time (GMT+1); A Zoom link will be sent out to registered participants on the night before the event.
12.00-12.45 Live Talk
Kara Fleming, KIMEP University, Kazakhstan
Language and nation building in Kazakhstan: Threat, power, desire
13.00-14.30 Parallel Discussion Panels
Format of discussion panels: Presenters give 5 min overview of main points/argument + Respondents give 5 min response + Audience discusses for 5 mins + Invited discussant gives 20 min commentary + Audience discusses for 10-30 mins.
3A: Non-standard varieties (Discussant: Kara Fleming)
Yu-Xian (Claire) Huang – An examination of non-standard Mandarin varieties in Taiwan (Respondent: Büşra Can)
Büşra Can – Standard accented Turkish speakers’ perception of Kurdish accented speakers (Respondent: Marina Zagidullina)
Marina Zagidullina – Grammar-Nazi: When culture becomes racism (Respondent: Yu-Xian (Claire) Huang)
3B: Political discourse (Discussant: Johannes Angermuller)
Lyubov Guervich – “Agonal” signs or pragmatic borrowings? (Respondent: Michalis Tastsoglou)
Michalis Tastsoglou – Principles of neoliberalism in Memoranda discourse (Respondent: Yating Yu)
Dimitrii Tolkachev – Policy evaluation of “non-traditional sexual relationships” regulation in Russia (Respondent: Lyubov Guervich)
Yating Yu – A critical metaphor analysis of the reportage of COVID-19 in China Daily (Respondent: Dimitrii Tolkachev)
3C: Education (Discussant: Adriana Patiño-Santos)
Mirjam Hauck – Language use, identity and positioning in collaborative online international learning (Respondent: Diane de Saint Lége)
Diane de Saint Léger – Legitimising a language reform on the occasion of a French language ideological debate (Respondent: Attallah Alanazi)
Tinghe Jin – British Government policy engagement with the teaching and learning of Chinese language (Respondent: Mirjam Hauck)
Attallah Alanazi – Views of English as a Lingua Franca (Respondent: Tinghe Jin)
14.30-15.00 Break and Networking
A link to Wonder will be sent out to all registered participants on the night before the event.
15.00-15.45 Live Talk
Adriana Patiño-Santos, University of Southampton, United Kingdom
English first: The shaping of a generation
15.45-16.00 Closing and Farewell
Johannes Angermuller, Michael Kranert, Md Shajedur Rahman and Jaspal Naveel Singh
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- 704 viste