Conference: 9th international symposium on Iconicity

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here’s a link to the conference website

there’s also a permanent link in the ‘conferences’ blogroll, way down on the right…

Ontogenesis: Sighted Children Of Blind Parents

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Infants of blind parents learn to communicate in different ways with their parents and other sighted adults – a skill that enhances their development, a new study shows. The study children began using their voices to communicate with their parents more quickly than average, while with other sighted adults they used the usual visual communication techniques like eye-contact and pointing just as effectively as children with sighted parents.

Book: The Oxford Handbook of the History of Linguistics

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Title: The Oxford Handbook of the History of Linguistics
Series Title: Oxford Handbooks in Linguistics

Publication Year: 2013
Publisher: Oxford University Press
http://www.oup.com/us

Book URL: http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780199585847.do

Editor: Keith Allan

Hardback: ISBN:  9780199585847 Pages: 952 Price: U.K. £ 95.00

Abstract:

In this outstanding book leading scholars from around the world examine the
history of linguistics from ancient origins to the present. They consider
every aspect of the field from language origins to neurolinguistics, explore
linguistic traditions in east and west, chronicle centuries of explanations
for language structures, meanings, and usage, and look at how it has been
practically applied.

The book is organized in six parts. The first looks at the origins of
language, the invention of writing, the nature of gesture, and sign languages.
Part II examines the history of the analysis and description of sound systems.
Part III considers the history of linguistics in China, Korea, Japan, India,
and the Middle East, as well as the history of the study of Semitic and
Afro-Asiatic. Part IV examines the history of grammar and morphology in the
west from the classical world to the present. Part V surveys the history of
lexicography semantics, pragmatics, and text and discourse studies. Part VI
looks at the history the application of linguistics in fields that include the
language classification; social and cultural theory; psychology and the brain
sciences; education and translation; computational science; and the
development of linguistic corpora. The book ends with a history of the
philosophy of linguistics.

The Oxford Handbook of the History of Linguistics makes a significant
contribution to the historiography of linguistics. It will also be a valuable
reference for scholars and students in linguists and related fields, including
philosophy and cognitive science.

Book: Iconic Investigations

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Title: Iconic Investigations
Series Title: Iconicity in Language and Literature 12

Publication Year: 2013
Publisher: John Benjamins
http://www.benjamins.com/

Book URL: http://benjamins.com/catalog/ill.12

Editor: Lars Elleström
Editor: Olga Fischer
Editor: Christina Ljungberg

Electronic: ISBN:  9789027272232 Pages:  Price: U.S. $ 158.00
Electronic: ISBN:  9789027272232 Pages:  Price: Europe EURO 105.00
Electronic: ISBN:  9789027272232 Pages:  Price: U.K. £ 88.00
Hardback: ISBN:  9789027243485 Pages:  Price: Europe EURO 111.30
Hardback: ISBN:  9789027243485 Pages:  Price: U.K. £ 88.00
Hardback: ISBN:  9789027243485 Pages:  Price: U.S. $ 158.00

Abstract:

The contributions to Iconic Investigations deal with linguistic or literary
aspects of language. While some studies analyze the cognitive structures of
language, others pay close attention to the sounds of spoken language and the
visual characteristics of written language. In addition this volume also
contains studies of media types such as music and visual images that are
integrated into the overall project to deepen the understanding of iconicity –
the creation of meaning by way of similarity relations. Iconicity is a
fundamental but relatively unexplored part of signification in language and
other media types. During the last decades, the study of iconicity has emerged
as a vital research area with far-reaching interdisciplinary scope and the
volume should be of interest for students and researchers interested in
scholarly fields such as semiotics, cognitive linguistics, conceptual metaphor
studies, poetry, intermediality, and multimodality.

Critical Approaches to Discourse Analysis across Disciplines

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Full Title: Critical Approaches to Discourse Analysis across Disciplines
Short Title: CADAAD

Date: 01-Sep-2014 – 03-Sep-2014
Location: Budapest, Hungary
Contact Person: Tamás Eitler
Meeting Email: cadaad2014@gmail.com
Web Site: http://cadaad.net/cadaad_2014

Call Deadline: 01-Dec-2013

Meeting Description:

CADAAD conferences are intended to promote current directions and new developments in cross-disciplinary critical discourse research. The fifth CADAAD conference will take place in Budapest, 1-3 September 2014.

Reflecting the diversity of topics and approaches in critical discourse studies, the following distinguished guests have confirmed their participation as plenary speakers:

Professor Ruth Wodak (Lancaster University)
Professor Theo Van Leeuwen (University of Technology Sydney)
Professor Lilie Chouliaraki (London School of Economics)
Professor Andreas Musolff (University of East Anglia)
Professor Crispin Thurlow (University of Washington)

Call for Papers:

We welcome papers which, from a critical-analytical perspective, deal with contemporary social, scientific, political, economic, or professional discourses and genres. Possible topics include but are not limited to the following:

– (New) Media Discourse
– Party Political Discourse
– Advertising
– Discourses of War and Terrorism
– Discourses of Discrimination and Inequality
– Power, Ideology and Dominance in Institutional Discourse
– Identity in Discourse
– Education Discourses
– Environmental Discourses
– Health Communication
– Language and the Law

We especially welcome papers which re-examine existing frameworks for critical discourse research and/or which highlight and apply new methodologies sourced from anywhere across the humanities, social and cognitive sciences including but without being limited to the following fields:

– Sociolinguistics
– Multimodality
– Media and Mass Communication Studies
– Political Science
– Functional Linguistics
– Cognitive Linguistics
– Corpus Linguistics
– Pragmatics and Argumentation Theory
– Conversation and Discourse Analysis
– Ethnography of Communication
– Discursive Psychology

Papers will be allocated 20 minutes plus 10 minutes for questions. The language of the conference is English.

Abstracts of no more than 250 words including references should be sent as MS Word attachment tocadaad2014@gmail.com before 1 December 2013. Please include in the body of the email but not in the abstract itself (1) your name, (2) affiliation and (3) email address. Notifications of acceptance will be communicated by 1 March 2014.

A peer-reviewed collection of selected papers is planned to be published with an international publisher.

For more information, please visit http://cadaad.net/cadaad_2014. Should you have any questions, please contact us at cadaad2014@gmail.com.

Birdsong, Speech, And Language: Exploring the Evolution of Mind and Brain

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Title: Birdsong, Speech, And Language
Subtitle: Exploring the Evolution of Mind and Brain
Publication Year: 2013
Publisher: MIT Press
http://mitpress.mit.edu/

Book URL: http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/birdsong-speech-and-language-0

Editor: Johan J. Bolhuis
Editor: Martin Everaert

Hardback: ISBN:  9780262018609 Pages: 556 Price: U.S. $ 50.00

Abstract:

Scholars have long been captivated by the parallels between birdsong and human
speech and language. In this book, leading scholars draw on the latest
research to explore what birdsong can tell us about the biology of human
speech and language and the consequences for evolutionary biology. They
examine the cognitive and neural similarities between birdsong learning and
speech and language acquisition, considering vocal imitation, auditory
learning, an early vocalization phase (“babbling”), the structural properties
of birdsong and human language, and the striking similarities between the
neural organization of learning and vocal production in birdsong and human
speech.

After outlining the basic issues involved in the study of both language and
evolution, the contributors compare birdsong and language in terms of
acquisition, recursion, and core structural properties, and then examine the
neurobiology of song and speech, genomic factors, and the emergence and
evolution of language.

Contributors
Hermann Ackermann, Gabriël J. L. Beckers, Robert C. Berwick, Johan J. Bolhuis,
Noam Chomsky, Frank Eisner, Martin Everaert, Michale S. Fee, Olga Fehér, Simon
E. Fisher, W. Tecumseh Fitch, Jonathan B. Fritz, Sharon M. H. Gobes, Riny
Huijbregts, Erich Jarvis, Robert Lachlan, Ann Law, Michael A. Long, Gary F.
Marcus, Carolyn McGettigan, Daniel Mietchen, Richard Mooney, Sanne Moorman,
Kazuo Okanoya, Christophe Pallier, Irene M. Pepperberg, Jonathan F. Prather,
Franck Ramus, Eric Reuland, Constance Scharff, Sophie K. Scott, Neil Smith,
Ofer Tchernichovski, Carel ten Cate, Christopher K. Thompson, Frank Wijnen,
Moira Yip, Wolfram Ziegler, Willem Zuidema

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