Meeting of the SOCIETY FOR PIDGIN AND CREOLE LINGUISTICS
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- Date: Tue, 14 Dec 2004 12:20:22 -0500
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DIALECT SPEAKERS AND LINGUISTICS
Find Resources for African American Black Vernacular,
Creole, Patois, A pidgin is a new language which develops
in situations where speakers of different languages need to
communicate but don't share a common language.
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To: CreoleTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
From: Adrienne Bruyn <a.bruyn@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Sat, 11 Dec 2004 17:24:42 +0100
Subject: [CreoleTalk] SPCL 2005 Oakland PROGRAM
Meeting of the SOCIETY FOR PIDGIN AND CREOLE LINGUISTICS (SPCL)
Oakland, CA, USA, 7-8 January 2005
in conjunction with the 79th Annual Meeting of the Linguistic Society
of America (LSA)
(see http://www.lsadc.org/annmeet/index.html)
PROGRAM
FRIDAY 7 January 2005
1A [LSA 56] MODELS OF CREOLIZATION
9:00 Carol Myers-Scotton (University of South Carolina): The
grammatical abruptness of language shift: Why creolists should care
9:30 Kenny Smith (University of Edinburgh): Understanding
mechanisms of creolization through computational modeling
10:00 Patrick-Andr=E9 Mather (Universidad de Puerto Rico, R=EDo
Piedras): Re-examining the Relexification hypothesis and the
Bioprogram hypothesis in terms of E-creolization
1B [LSA 57] PROSODY
9:30 Shelome Gooden (University of Pittsburgh): Creole prosody in
the 1960s: An early analysis revisited
10:00 Mark Evans (Reed College): Rhythmic asymmetry in the prosody
of cross-varietal Englishes
10:30 - 10:50 Break
2A [LSA 58] SOCIOLINGUISTIC CONTEXTS
10:50 [withdrawn]
11:20 Ronald Kephart (University of North Florida): Ecology of
Creole French on Carriacou
2B [LSA 59] PHONOLOGY IN CONTACT
10:50 Yuchau E. Hsiao, Keng-Chang Wu & Yi-Wen Chen (National
Chengchi University, Taipei): Phonological influences:
Taiwanese-Mandarin and Mandarin-Taiwanese
11:20 Malcolm A. Finney (California State University, Long Beach):
The effects of universals on the syllable structure of Krio
11:50 - 2:00 Break
3A [LSA 60] CREOLIZATION AND CONVERGENCE IN SOUTH ASIA
2:00 Tripti Karekatti (Shivaji University, Kohapur): Revisiting
Kupwar: Language convergence and creolization in
Karnataka-Maharashtra border villages
2:30 St=E9phane Goyette (University of Ottawa): From Sanskrit to
Marathi: A case of creolization?
3:00 Scott Paauw (State University of New York, Buffalo): A
historical analysis of the lexicon of Sri Lanka Malay
3B [LSA 61] SUBSTRATE AND INNOVATION IN THE SURINAME CREOLES
2:00 Marvin Kramer (Dharma Realm Buddhist University): Innovative
and transferred tone spread rules in Saramaccan serial verbs
2:30 Claire Lefebvre (Universit=E9 du Qu=E9bec, Montr=E9al): More on the
properties of Saramaccan t=E1a and related lexical items
3:00 Adrienne Bruyn (Radboud University Nijmegen): Attributive
possession in the Suriname creoles: A diachronic-comparative
perspective
3:30 - 3:50 Break
4A [LSA 62] SPANISH IN CUBA
3:50 Armin Schwegler (University of California, Irvine): Habla
bozal: Captivating new evidence from a contemporary source
(Afro-Cuban Palero "priests" in trance)
4:20 J. Clancy Clements & Stuart Davis (Indiana University): New
evidence on the nature of Bozal Spanish in 19th century Cuba
4:50 Don E. Walicek (University of Puerto Rico, R=EDo Piedras):
Chinese-Cuban Pidgin Spanish in sociohistorical context
4B [LSA 63] TENSE-MOOD-ASPECT
3:50 Jo=E3o Costa & Fernanda Pratas (Universidade Nova de Lisboa):
TMA and adverbs are not a reliable diagnosis for a rich functional
domain:Evidence from Capeverdean
4:20 Aya Inoue (University of Hawai'i, Manoa): A quantitative study
of the past tense reference in Hawai'i Creole English
SATURDAY 8 January 2005
5A [LSA 64] ISSUES OF "CREOLENESS"
9:00 David Sutcliffe (Universitat Pompeu Fabra) & Yolanda McClung
(Independent Reseacher): What they been know about AAE in
Mississippi: The testimony of the ancestors
9:30 Patrick Steinkr=FCger (ZAS, Berlin): The creole character of=
Chabacano
10:00 Ian Smith (York University): (Re)conceptualizing the creole
(and pidgin) prototype
5B [LSA 65] GRAMMATICALIZATION, MARKEDNESS AND SUBSTRATE
9:00 Stephen Matthews (University of Hong Kong) & Virginia Yip
(Chinese University of Hong Kong): Contact-induced
grammaticalization in early bilingual development: The case of
one-relatives
9:30 Bao Zhiming (National University of Singapore): Markedness in
creole genesis
10:00 Kenneth M. Sumbuk (University of Papua New Guinea): The
substrate element of verbal reduplication in Melanesian Pidgin
10:30 - 10:45 Break
6A [LSA 66] IDENTITY AND LANGUAGE CHOICE
0:45 Jessica White (University of Texas, Austin): A sociohistorical
account of women and linguistic choice in creole genesis
11:15 Bettina Migge (University College Dublin): Bilingual speech
in the Eastern Maroon community
11:45 Lars Hinrichs (Freiburg University): Traditionally oral
languages in the New Media: Changing functions of Jamaican Creole
6B [LSA 67] MORPHO-SYNTAX
10:45 Dany Adone & Christian Horn (Heinrich-Heine-Universit=E4t
D=FCsseldorf): Compounds in Indian Ocean Creoles: Morphology or syntax?
11:15 Marco Nicolis (Universit=E0 di Siena): Free Inversion, that-t
effects, pro-drop: A view from Creoles
11:45 Maria Alexandra Fi=E9is & Fernanda Pratas (Universidade Nova de
Lisboa): Reflexivity in Capeverdean: Predicate properties and
sentence structure
12:15 - 2:00 Break
7 [LSA 68] PRAGMATIC ASPECTS OF LINGUISTIC CATEGORIES
2:00 Jorge E. Porras (Sonoma State University): Discourse markers
and oral narrative in Afro-Iberian Creoles: A semantic, pragmatic,
and textual analysis
2:30 Lise M. Dobrin (University of Virginia): What really
distinguishes yumi and mipela? The feature [social contrast] in Tok
Pisin
3:00 - 3:20 Break
3:20 - 5:00 SPCL BUSINESS MEETING
19:30 SPCL DINNER
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