programme of ICLaVE 8 as a pdf file
Transcription
programme of ICLaVE 8 as a pdf file
ICLaVE 8 Leipzig 27.-29.5.2015 Room HS 8 09:00 – 09:30 09:30 – 10:30 10:30 – 11:00 Day 1 – Wednesday, 27.5.2015 11:00 – 11:30 11:30 – 12:00 12:00 – 12:30 12:30 – 13:30 13:30 – 14:00 14:00 – 14:30 14:30 – 15:00 15:00 – 15:30 15:30 – 16:00 16:00 – 16:30 16:30 – 17:00 17:00 – 17:30 18:15 – Room HS 16 Room HS 17 Room S 202 Opening Plenary 1: Jürgen Erich Schmidt (Forschungsstelle Deutscher Sprachatlas, Universität Marburg): Dynamics, variation and the brain – Hörsaal 3 Coffee break Panel 1: Quantitative and qualitative Session 1 (Media) Panel 2: Living on the border between Session 2 (Levelling/Convergence) approaches to language (de)standardization Jensen conflicting communities of practice Tsiplakou Grondelaers / Jaspers Seals Grondelaers, Speelman & van Hout Britain, Leemann & Kolly NOTE: Different timing Barbosa, Flores & Gee Flemish Dutch is destandardizing: Evidence Variable use of strong preterites in European ! abstract Leemann from speaker evaluation Portuguese. A sociolinguistic and theoretical The English Dialect App Watt & Llamas Perception of difference: socioindexical forms approach in the Scottish/English border region Kristiansen et al. Leemann & Kolly Aurrekoetxea et al. Kirkham Language ideology in sociolinguistic change: ! abstract Kolly Convergence in the Basque Language Boundaries and intersections: Class, ethnicity Quantitative and qualitative studies in There’s an app for that: documenting and identity in a multiethnic school Denmark language change with smartphone applications van de Mieroop, Zenner & Marzo Reichelt Sundgren Standard and Colloquial Belgian Dutch pro“That was a bit, um, British, wasn’t it?” – Accommodation and other factors influencing nouns of address: A variationist-interactional Scripted Britishness on American television linguistic variation in face-to-face interaction study of child-directed speech in dinner table and its comparability with British based interactions media Lunch break Panel 1 continuing Session 4 (Complexity/ mopho-syntax) Panel 2 continuing Session 5 (Language in the City) Gregersen NN Delarue & Van Lancker Szmrecsanyi et al. Shah Marzo, Van De Mieroop & Zenner Teachers’ and pupils’ strategies in dealing Probabilistic variation in a comparative Swahili loans in ‘London Gujarati’: Linguistic Understanding the social meaning of urban with monolingual, SLI-driven language-inperspective: the grammar of varieties of traces from the East African past vernaculars in interaction: a mixed methods education policies in Flanders English approach Seals Ghyselen Röthlisberger Pinkeviciene Negotiating conflicting ideologies: Delineating standard and non-standard Probabilistic constraints on linguistic choiceBroadened linguistic repertoires: Elements of Sociolinguistic identity in the Ukrainian varieties: on the need to combine perceptual making: the dative alternation in varieties of talk adult Lithuanian city dwellers choose to conflict and productive data English use at work XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Jaspers Szczepaniak, Vieregge & Schmitt Discussion Flemish Dutch is not destandardizing: Short and Long Genitive in German: Evidence from ethnographic and discourseVariation, doubtful cases and linguistic analytic analysis insecurity Coffee break Panel 1 continueing Session 7 (Complexity/ mopho-syntax) Session 8 (Borders) Session 9 (Language in the City) Szczepaniak Levon Wiese Madsen Zimmer Jakop Rathcke & Stuart-Smith Re-labelling standard speech – Reformulating Morphological scheme constancy as a factor Dual forms in Slovenian and bordering Internal push or external pull? Real-time sociolinguistic values determining variation: Genitive-s-omission in Croatian dialects variation and change in the Scottish Vowel German Length Rule in Glasgow Cornips & de Rooij Markopoulos Riccabona Baranowski The dynamics of multistandardisation and Where in language complexity is language Does the state border play a role in prosodic Part of town as an independent factor: the diversification in a dialect area variation? variation? NORTH-FORCE merger in Manchester English Rosseel, Geeraerts & Speelman Implicit measures of automatic evaluation: Exploring new quantitative methods to measure the perception of language varieties Preston A quadrangulation of attitudinal study: Qualitative-Quantitative-ConsciousNonconscious Poster session & wine reception Room S 204 Session 3 (Standards) Auger Widmer et al. Language Use in Aphasia Testing in GermanSpeaking Switzerland Tinits Reduction in variation in written Estonian in 1880–1920 XXXXXXXXXX Session 6 (Standards) Kontra von Waldenfels Standard language variation of Slavic: where Slavic differs differently (and where the same way) Vogl Standard language ideology and language learning in Europe Werner Language Variation and Teaching in the Absence of a Standardised Language: A Case Study Session 10 (Acquisition) Werner Kaiser Pre-school children’s varietal competence in Austrian German: developing one's L1 repertoire" Davydova & Buchstaller Expanding the circle to Learner English: Investigating quotatives in a German student community Torres Cacoullos & Travis Variationist typology: null vs. non-null subject languages? Breuninger & Pfeiffer Phonological Variation and Sociolinguistic Ideologies in the Upper Rhine Area Öqvist Upper-class Stockholm Swedish Ehret & Szmrecsanyi An information-theoretic perspective on complexity variation in learner English Forker & Haig Experiencer coding on the European periphery XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Young Rough and posh, blatte and östermalmare: Indexically-charged phonology in multiethnic Stockholm XXXXXXXX Room HS 8 Room HS 16 Room HS 17 Room S 202 Session 11 (Acoustic Phonetics) van de Velde Panel 3: Koines and regional standard varieties Panel 4: Community based language change Buchstaller & Evans Wagner Session 12 (Attitudes/ Perception) Purschke Weirich & Jannedy Listening with an Attitude: Evaluations of presumed speaker groups (Hood German vs. French learners) Gnevsheva Effect of visual input on accentedness perception of Asian and Caucasian nonnative English speakers Ebner “Poor understanding of grammar”?: A sociolinguistic analysis of usage attitudes in British English Santos Raña & Suárez Quintas Perceptions on dialectal variation: A study on both sides of the Galician and Portuguese border Day 2 – Thursday, 28.5.2015 Hinskens, Tsiplakou & Villena Ponsoda 09:00 – 09:30 Turton & Baranowski /u/-fronting before /l/ in Manchester: an acoustic and articulatory study Tsiplakou Are newly-emergent varieties ‘coherent’? Notes from Cypriot Greek Nagy Communities-based research 09:30 – 10:00 Torgersen & Szakay An analysis of VOT in London English Wiese, & Rehbein Determiner omission in urban German: multilingual versus monolingual settings 10:00 – 10:30 Kirkham & Wormald An ultrasound study of language contact in Bradford English liquids 10:30 – 11:00 Otto & Simpson Social factors and acoustic variability in the realization of postvocalic /r/ in East Thuringian Coffee break Session 13 (Meaning/ Individuation) Pharao Post Individual variation according to social setting among Russian dialect speakers Schützler Stylistic and functional variation of adverbial connectives: although, though and even though in British Englisch Levon, Ilbury & Weston Gender and Interactional Meaning: High Rising Terminals in London Cerruti Co-occurring features in a dialect-standard continuum: regional standards in ItaloRomance Villena Ponsoda et al. Between local and standard varieties: horizontal and vertical convergence and divergence of dialects in Southern Spain Røyneland Regional varieties in Norway – fact or fiction? Panel 3 Panel 4 Kehrein The shapes of the vertical variation spaces in Germany Hinskens & Vandekerckhove Partly undressed and halfway frozen? Stability and coherence in koines and regional standard varieties of Dutch Hinskens, Tsiplakou & Villena Ponsoda Disc.: Koines and regional standard varieties. How stable and coherent can they become? Adli Lifestyle as a bridge between the macro- and micro-sociology in sociolinguistics Dodsworth Developing network methods in communitybased sociolinguistics Lunch break Session 15 (Lexical Issues) Oberholzer Sousa Aggregate analysis of lexical variation in Galician dialects Session 16 (Meaning/ Individuation) Thorburn Németh et al. Two fieldworkers’ effects on a respondent’s language use in Szeged, Hungary Panel 4 15:50 – 15:30 Morand & Vorwerg Lexical Selection in Bivarietal Speakers Droste The social life of language variation Discussion 15:30 – 16:00 Lüthi & Vorwerg Candelas de la Ossa Swiss German at the lemma level – A psycho- Modal auxiliary variation and indexing linguistic approach to language varieties presumed knowledge distribution in sexual consent guidance for young people Ramisch Lillelund & Pharao 'Never trust English spelling' or what can be On the social meanings of palatalized /t/ learnt/learned from the analysis of past tense and fronted /s/ among adolescent and past participle forms Copenhagen speakers Coffee break Plenary 2: Miriam Meyerhoff (Victoria University of Wellington): The large and variation – Hörsaal 9 Conference dinner 11:00 – 11:30 11:30 – 13:00 11:30 – 12:00 12:00 – 12:30 12:30 – 13:00 13:00- 14:30 14:30 – 16:30 14:30 – 15:00 cancelle 16:00 – 16:30 16:30 – 17:00 17:00 – 18:00 19:30 – d Ravindranath Language change in the post-colonial context Buchstaller, Corrigan & Mearns Six decades of interviews on Tyneside Llamas & Watt Communities divided: Convergence and divergence across a political border Session 14 (Attitudes/ Perception) Reershemius Pinget & Kager & Van de Velde Linking perception and production in sound change Tummers, Deveneyns & Speelman Varieties in Flemish education. Teachers’ attitudes towards standard and substandard Belgian Dutch Papazachariou et al. The perception of regional variety by elementary school students, as it is represented in mass culture Haspelmath Scholar-owned open-access publishing in linguistics Session 17 (Attitudes/ Perception) Vandekerckhove Rabb Combining folk linguistics with variationist sociolinguistics: Language variation in Vaasa Swedish Vyšniauskiene Indexical Meanings of Russian and English Resources in Vilnius Adolescents’ Speech Krause The social meaning of Russian varieties: perceptual data from inside and outside Russia XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Meyerhoff Letting the community lead ⤴ ︎ d cancelle the small of it: Big issues with smaller samples in the study of language 09:00 – 10:30 09:00 – 09:30 Day 3 – Friday, 29.5.2015 09:30 – 10:00 10:00 -10:30 10:30 – 11:00 11:00 – 13:00 11:00 – 11:30 11:30 – 12:00 12:00 -12:30 12:30 – 13:00 13:00 – 14:30 14:30 – 16:00 14:30 – 15:00 15:00 – 15:30 Room HS 8 Room HS 16 Room HS 17 Room S 202 Session 18 (Contact) Wenner Bucher et al. Differences and similarities of code-switching patterns in the Swiss sms4science corpus Leonardi The impact of diglossia in South Tyrol: German language comprehension in early childhood Kenda-Jež The language of last speakers of Slovenian in Lipalja vas (Laglesie-San Leopoldo, Valcanale, Italy) Coffee break Session 21 (Contact) Adli Meyerhoff & Daleszynska The voice of Polan[t] Panel 5: Minority languages in Europe Villeneuve & Haug Hilton Nota, Coler & Haug Hilton Language contact and intonation patterns: the case of Frisian and Dutch Kasstan Convergence and divergence in Francoprovençal: new speaker networks as sources of Morris Examining historical convergence and synchronic variation in situations of long-term contact Session 19 (Change) Vorwerg XXXXXXXXXXX Session 20: (Migration) Durham Corrigan, Thorburn & Mearns How Migration has Transformed the Linguistic Ecology of Northern Ireland Kühl & Heegård Petersen Language maintenance and language change in migrant groups. A case study of Danish emigrants in North America Pappas “Going back to the farm:” a report on how the economic crisis is affecting dialect usage in Greece Louredo A study of Galician-Castilian contact based on the verb morphology of dialects of the Ribeiro district Lindström et al. How text frequencies reflect language contacts: the use of perfect and pluperfect in Estonian dialects XXXXXXXXXXXXX Lunch break Session 24 (Contact) Villeneuve Kristoffersen Spreading of Norwegian contrastive tonal accent into a dialect with no former accentual contrast Petzell Swedish word order in Stockholm Low German Paiva & Aguiar Variation and change in the second person plural forms of address in European Portuguese Beyer Structural variation in conjunctions in Luxembourgish German in the 19th century Panel 5: Session 22 (Change) Pappas Nance et al. Mathussek New speakers and language contact: Scottish Recent Tendencies in Language Change in Gaelic in Glasgow and Edinburgh South-West-Germany Knooihuizen Wenner & Nilsson Danish influence on morphosyntactic The unruly dialect variant [a] – the case of variation and change in Faroese opening of [æ] in traditional Torsby dialect Session 23 (Space) Hinskens Franco, Speelman & Geeraerts Why dialects differ: the influence of concept features on lexical geographical variation Childs et al. Variation in any- and no-negation from a transatlantic perspective Nagy Cross-dialect vs. cross-linguistic contact in Southern Italy Zhigulskaya A variation study of third person pronouns in prepositional constructions: a North Russian Dialect Krasselt What comes first, what comes next? A Corpus Analysis of Verb Cluster Serialization in Early New High German Braber & Flynn Variation of unstressed vowels in the East Midlands Session 26 (Change) Corrigan Jansen Variation and Change Processes in a Peripheral Town – The Case of THOUGHT in Maryport English Jensen & Christensen Extending in time and space: General extenders in Danish Session 27 (Space) Kehrein Fischer, Limper & Spang A linguistic mapping and analyzing tool – the online application REDE SprachGIS (www.regionalsprache.de) Pheiff Regional and social variation in zero articles in northern Dutch varieties: evidence from the Wenker surveys Priiki Combining methods in interactional sociolinguistics – analyzing the variation of spoken Finnish third-person pronouns on micro and macro level Auger & Villeneuve Morphosyntactic convergence between French and Picard in Vimeu, France Session 25 (Media) Torgersen Nevinskaitė Foreign Languages and Borrowings in Lithuanian Advertising: Prevalence and Functions Reershemius & Ziegler Indexicalization of ethnolectal features in performed language: an analysis of the film “Fack ju Göhte" Durham How to sound lush in 140 characters: Performing a Welsh accent on Twitter 15:30 – 16:00 Knooihuizen Double Definiteness and Danish Influence in Faroese 16:00 – 16:30 16:30 – 17:30 Coffee break Plenary 3: Susanne Michaelis & Martin Haspelmath (MPI-EVA Leipzig): Analytic and synthetic: Typological change in varieties of European languages – Hörsaal 3 Farewell 17:30 – 18:00 Laanemets AUX-Variation in Danish: the case of ‘gå’ Kunzmann & Oberholzer Geolinguistic documentation of multilingual areas – and the challenge of digital humanities Poster presentations – Day 1 Adamou et al. Bassaganyas, Burnett & Fontana Boyd Döhmer Edelhoff Ensunza Aldamizetxebarria Grönberg Håkansson Jónsdóttir Kappa Knyazev & Grammatchikova Kouti Kul Oberholzer Safonova Schlechtweg & Härtl Škevin Södergård & Leinonen Sternke & Römling Suárez Quintas Stoeckle Ter-Avanesova Tirard Tolimir-Hölzl van den Heuij et al. Van Epps Vida-Castro von Waldenfels et al. Pilar Barbosa Borrowing and contact intensity: A corpus-driven approach from four Slavic minority languages Resultative Secondary Predication in Old Romance: Evidence from Old French and Old Catalan Indexing sexual orientation in non-native speakers of English Distributional Properties of Personal Pronouns in Luxembourgish The diminutive singular doublet in the Luxembourgish and Moselle Franconian transitional area Linguistic variation and levelling in the Basque language: the case of Busturialdea Bamba revisited Number Agreement in Existential Constructions To be or not to be a productive word-formation suffix: Verbs of type –na + st in Icelandic Lexical Borrowings in Greek: Domain-dependent Variation in Vowel Realization Variations in Rhythmical Structure of Word as a Function of Timing in Russian Variation in perfective expression in Modern Greek: Another look at the Greek Present Perfect Reduction of consonants in connected speech of Lancashire Language Use and Language Attitudes in German-speaking Switzerland Variation of Rhythmical Structure of Phonological Word in Standard Russian (Post-tonic vowels) The memorization of complex items - a cross-linguistic comparison Variation in Croatian-Čakavian: the Construction of the Rural Speaker's Identity in the Urban Speech Community Building a corpus of Swedish spoken in Finland Lavender Linguistics, an overview Mapping perceptions and attitudes about Galician dialects Co-Occurrences of Doubling Verbs in Swiss German The stable variability in Russian local varieties A variationist approach to syntactic doubling: the case of Romani Language and the diaspora – local versus ethno-national loyalities Variation in acquisition: Problematizing bidialectal child acquisition. The three-gender system in two varieties of Jämtlandic Resyllabification of Preconsonantal / s/ in a Southern Spanish Variety. Acoustic Correlates on an Ongoing Linguistic Change in Malaga Modelling speaker variation and dialect change in Northern Russia Clitic Climbing in the Speech of Braga Plenary speakers Jürgen Erich Schmidt (Forschungsstelle Deutscher Sprachatlas, Universität Marburg) Miriam Meyerhoff (Victoria University of Wellington) Susanne Michaelis/Martin Haspelmath (MPI-EVA Leipzig) Local organizing committee Isabelle Buchstaller Beat Siebenhaar Susanne Lantermann Susann Widder International scientific committee Peter Auer (FRIAS & University of Freiburg) Frans Hinskens (Meertens Instituut & Free University Amsterdam) Paul Kerswill (University of York) Tore Kristiansen (University of Copenhagen) Eivind Torgersen (Sør-Trøndelag University College) Stavroula Tsiplakou University of Cyprus) Juan Villena Ponsoda (University of Malaga) Lena Wenner (Institute for Language and Folklore)