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African conference: On the Brink? Endangered Archives and Endangered Languages in Africa

Posted by sociolingo on April 4, 2008

SCOLMA (the UK Libraries and Archives Group on Africa) invites registrations for the 2008 annual conference,On the Brink? Endangered Archives and Endangered Languages in AfricaDate: Tuesday 10 June 2008, 10.00 - 17.00Venue: British Library Conference Centre, British Library, 96 Euston Road, London NW1 2DBSpeakers will include Paul Lihoma, Director, National Archives of Malawi, and representatives and grant-holders from the Endangered Archives Programme (British Library) and the Hans Rausing Endangered Languages Project (School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London).Fee (including lunch and refreshments): £35 (concessions £15)Further information at:http://www.lse.ac.uk/library/scolma/conference.htm <http://www.lse.ac.uk/library/scolma/conference.htm>To register, please contact Ros Buck, SCOLMA Secretary, email: rbuck@oxfam.org.uk, or by post: Ros Buck, Librarian, Library, International Division, Oxfam GB, Oxfam House, John Smith Drive, Cowley, Oxford, OX4 2JY.Registration closes on Friday 6th June.Please make cheques payable to SCOLMA. (For BACS payments please contact Ian Cooke, SCOLMA Treasurer, email: ian.cooke@bl.uk <mailto:ian.cooke@bl.uk> )

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN ACADEMIC, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, African conferences, African endangered languages, African languages, LINGUISTICS, SOCIOLINGUISTICS | No Comments »

Ghana: Summer School on Documentary Linguistics in West Africa

Posted by sociolingo on March 31, 2008

Posted on March 31, 2008.

Summer School on Documentary Linguistics in West Africa

University of Education, Winneba, Ghana

16-27 July 2008

A 10-day summer school on language documentation will be held prior to the 26th West African Languages Congress (WALC) of the West African Linguistics Society (WALS/SLAO) at the University of Education, Winneba, Ghana, 28th July to 3nd August 2008. The theme of the Congress is “Language Documentation in Support of West African Languages”.

The goal of the Summer School is to provide training for linguists and graduate students in the West African region in language documentation theory and practice.

Pending final approval, the 2008 Summer School on Documentary Linguistics in West Africa will be sponsored by the Endangered Languages Documentation Programme (ELDP) of the Hans Rausing Endangered Languages Project (HRELP), SOAS, London.

 

Participants:

The maximum number of participants is 30 and they will be selected so that each country in the region will be represented.

How to apply:

 

Applicants must reside and study/work in West Africa.

They should have a minimum of BA or its equivalent involving some linguistic training.

They should have some fieldwork experience or have concrete plans for doing documentation work.

They should be committed to and have a plan for transferring the knowledge they acquire to others in their universities and countries.

The general lectures will be given in English, hence all participants should be able to read and understand basic English. Workshops and tutorials may be offered in French as well, when necessary.

 

Interested persons should send an application via e-mail or fax to the following address:

 

Felix K. Ameka

African Languages and Cultures

Leiden University Centre for Linguistics

P. O. Box 9515

2300 RA Leiden

The Nehterlands

 

Tel: + 31 – 71 – 527 2243

Fax; + 31 – 71- 527  7569

 

 

 

Your application must include:

 

A. Personal background Information

 

Full name

Position

Affiliation

Address

 

Telephone, fax, e-mail

 

Country

 

First language(s):

 

Other West African languages you know:

 

B. Curriculum Vitae and Motivation

 

1.     Give a brief statement of your University studies involving linguistics (including degrees obtained). Indicate the courses you have followed.

2.     What experience do you have in linguistic description (e.g. fieldwork)? Indicate whether the languages you have worked on, are your first or other language. 

3.     What experience do you have in language documentation including the use of any tools?

4.     Which language(s) are you working on or plan to work on? Provide information on their geographical location and genetic affiliation. 

5.     Explain your commitment as well as how you plan to transfer the knowledge you would acquire to     others in your institution and/or country.

6.     Provide the name and contact details of your Supervisor or an academic who would like to serve as a referee for you. Explain why you have nominated this person.

C Travel information

 

7.     There will be travel bursaries to supplement the travel costs of participants (mostly by road) from country of residence to Winneba, Ghana. Provide an estimate of the cost of travel from your residence to Winneba.

Send your application in to the address provided above not later than April 30th, 2008.

Applications received will be acknowledged immediately.

Decisions on the applications will be made by the Organising Committee and communicated to the applicants by 15th May 2008.

 

The resource persons include:

 

Firmin Ahoua, Université de Cocody, Abidjan

Felix Ameka, Leiden University

Bruce Connell, York University and University of Kent

William Foley, University of Sydney

Dafydd Gibbon, University of Bielefeld

Birgit Hellwig, RCLT, La Trobe, Melbourne

David Nathan, ELAR, SOAS

Sophie Salffner, ELAP, SOAS

Eno-Abasi Urua, University of Uyo

 

 

The topics to be covered are:

 

  • What is language documentation (including planning a language documentation project)
  • Ethical and methodological issues in language documentation (including fieldwork)
  • Techniques and methods of data collection
  • Transcription and annotation and their tools (Transcriber, Praat, ELAN)
  • Audio and video recording
  • Principles of archiving and dissemination: metadata, media, file formats
  • Ethnography in language documentation
  • Lexicography and tools (Toolbox)
  • Field Semantics
  • Field phonetics
  • Grant application writing

 

—————————————-

Felix K. Ameka

African Languages and Cultures

Leiden University

PB 9515

2300 RA Leiden

The Netherlands

 

tel: + 31 (0)71 527 2243

fax: + 31 (0)71 527 7569

 

Visit the website of the Journal of African Languages and Linguistics (JALL) at

www.degruyter.de

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN ACADEMIC, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, African conferences, African languages, African linguistics, LINGUISTICS | No Comments »

Ghana: West African Languages Congress 2008

Posted by sociolingo on March 18, 2008

Posted on March 18, 2008.

Activities in Summer 2008 in Ghana

(i)    There will be a Summer School on Documentary Linguistics in West Africa 16th to 27th July 2008, preceding the 26th West African Languages Congress, University of Education at Winneba. A call for applications for participation in the school will be sent out shortly. Registered participation is limited to graduate students and professionals resident in the West African region. The Summer School is supported by the Endangered Languages Programme (ELDP) of the Hans Rausing Endangered Languages Project, (HRELP), SOAS London.

(ii)  The 26th West African Languages Congress will be held at the University of Education, Winneba from 28th July till 3rd August 2008.  I paste the Call for abstracts below.

(iii) The 2008 International Workshop on the Ghana-Togo-Mountain (GTM) Languages

(Sponsored in part by the Endangered languages Programme of the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO))

Date:              3-8 August 2008.

Venue:      Bishop Konings Social Centre, Ho, Ghana

Theme:      KA- and NA- GTM Languages Forty Years On

Featured Speakers include:

                   Kevin Ford, Australia

Bernd Heine, University of Cologne

              Mary Esther Kropp Dakubu, University of Ghana, Legon

      Contact:  Felix  Ameka (e-mail: f.k.ameka@let.leidenuniv.nl)

 

The 26th West African Languages Conference and

The First Summer School of Linguistics

University of Education, Winneba, Ghana.

July 16– August 03, 2008.

SECOND CALL FOR PAPERS

Due to numerous requests, the deadline for submission of abstracts for the 26th West African Linguistics Congress (WALC) has been extended to Monday, March 31, 2008. The date for the Summer School has also been modified. Below are the details.

The 26th West African Linguistics Congress (WALC) will be held on July 28-August 3, 2008 at the University of Education, Winneba Campus, Ghana.

The conference will be preceded by a Summer School to be held from Monday, July 15 to Saturday July 26, 2008.

The conference theme is Language Documentation in Support of West African Languages.

 

The organizers of the conference would like to invite papers that address the conference theme, or any other topic relating to West African Languages and Linguistics.

Topics include, but are not limited to, the following:

·      Endangered Languages

·      Language and Culture

·      Language and Education

·      Language and Technology

·      Language Planning

·      Morphology

·      Phonology

·      Pragmatics

·      Psycholinguistics

·      Semantics

·      Sociolinguistics

·      Syntax

·      Typology

Abstracts may be submitted in either English or French by email (word attachment is preferred) to the following email address: walc2008winneba@yahoo.com. The abstract should not be more than one page of A4 paper in word using 12 pt of Times New Roman font. If you do not have regular access to e-mail, you may submit one copy of your abstract by regular mail on a CD or 3.5 floppy disk (Microsoft Word document only) to the following postal address:

The Chairman

WALC 2008 Local Organizing Committee

Departments of Ghanaian Languages Education

University of Education, Winneba

P. O. Box 25

Winneba

Ghana.

Deadline for submitting abstracts is March 31, 2008.

Notification of acceptance of abstracts will be sent out by Tuesday, April 15, 2008.

 

THE SUMMER SCHOOL OF LINGUISTICS

The Summer School will commence from 15th to 27th July, 2008 at the South Campus of the Winneba Campus of the University of Education, Winneba. Interested participants should apply separately for the Summer School.

REGISTRATION

Registration and payment of fees shall be made concurrently at the registration desk from July 28 through July 31, 2008.

Conference Fees:

Participants from outside of Africa: USD 25

Participants from Africa and students: USD 10

Membership fee: USD 10

Excursion and dinner fees will be communicated to participants in due course.

LOCAL Organizing Committee

Emmanuel Nicholas Abakah     Tel.    + 233 244 73 21 72 or +233 208 76 77 83)

Ephraim Avea Nsoh          + 233 207 31 01 93

Samuel Atintono A.          + 233 244 22 56 97

Francisca Adjei          + 233 242 15 11 52

Dominic Amuzu          + 233 244 73 98 42

Philip K. Geraldo   + 233 208 47 11 32

Louisa Koranteng          + 233 244 58 46 79

C. B. Buachie          + 233 208 22 76 38

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN ACADEMIC, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, African conferences, African languages, African linguistics, LINGUISTICS | No Comments »

Call for papers for the 7th Conference on Mande Studies

Posted by sociolingo on December 5, 2007

I’ve received the following conference notification, closing date end of December. If you are interested in sending in a paper and/or attending the conference, please read to the end of the article and respond to the conference organisers NOT to Sociolingo.

 

Call for papers for the 7th Conference on Mande Studies,

Lisbon, Portugal, June 24-28, 2008

 

Panel: Literacy practices in the Mande area/ Pratiques de l’écrit dans l’aire mandé

 

Convenors / Organisatrices:

Anne Doquet, IRD & Centre d’études africaines (EHESS)

Aïssatou Mbodj-Pouye, Centre d’études africaines (EHESS)

 

Abstract

This panel calls for propositions dealing with literacy practices: accounts of practices observed in the field as well as reflections on the researcher’s writing practices.

Literacy practices on grass-root level are often overlooked, but they are a growing part of people’s lives: notebooks or sheets of papers are held in a variety of settings, for a wide range of purposes.

Literate skills often remain a scarce resource, which gives them a specific role in the present context of political changes at local level. Studies of schooling choices show that people still believe in the importance of literacy even outside formal schooling. This raises issues of languages and scripts (sometimes contesting the dominant status of official languages as written languages).

Writing and reading practices invest the domestic sphere as well as the community level: keeping records, writing down knowledge, preserving secrets, etc. How do this processes interfere with oral modes of keeping and passing down knowledge?

Along with these private practices, studies of bureaucratic literacies (and their private counterpart), local historical writing, as well as other uses of print and press would usefully complement this approach. The panel will also include papers dealing with the way the writing activities of the researcher are locally perceived.

Literacy studies are a field of inquiry which is currently renewed by works from other African settings (see for instance the book edited by Karin Barber Africa’s hidden histories. Everyday literacy and Making the Self, Bloomington, Indiana Univ. Press 2006). We believe that Mande studies could benefit from this developments and provide new insights on this theme.

 

Résumé

L’objet de ce panel est de réunir des contributions portant sur des pratiques de l’écrit, que ce soit des pratiques observées sur le terrain ou un retour sur la pratique du chercheur comme ethnographe.

Les pratiques d’écriture des acteurs locaux, souvent inaperçues, sont pourtant largement présentes : cahiers, feuilles volantes font désormais partie du quotidien des zones rurales ou urbaines. La rareté des compétences en fait une ressource recherchée, rendant particulièrement vifs les enjeux de pouvoir autour de l’écrit accompagnant les reformulations politiques contemporaines. Les stratégies éducatives montrent un intérêt persistant pour l’écriture mais pas toujours dans la langue du système éducatif formel. Aussi les questions de langues et de graphies (contestant parfois le statut privilégié des langues officielles à l’écrit) sont-elles centrales pour comprendre la manière dont les individus se rapportent à l’écrit.

Ces pratiques ont pour échelle la sphère domestique ou la communauté et prennent diverses formes : tenir ses comptes, conserver des savoirs, préserver des secrets, etc. Une question se pose alors : comment cela s’articule-t-il avec les modes oraux de conservation et de transmission des savoirs ?

Outre ces pratiques privées, des analyses des écrits bureaucratiques (de leurs usages ou des résistances qu’ils suscitent), de la mise par écrit de l’histoire locale, des usages de l’imprimé et de la presse pourraient compléter cette approche. En parallèle, d’autres contributions prendront pour point de départ l’activité d’écriture du chercheur et les réactions qu’elle suscite.

Réfléchir à ces différentes formes de la culture écrite nous semble important au moment où l’histoire de ces pratiques se constitue en champ de recherche pour d’autres régions du continent (en témoigne l’ouvrage collectif dirigé par Karin Barber Africa’s hidden histories. Everyday literacy and Making the Self, Bloomington, Indiana Univ. Press 2006).

 

 

Contributors to this date (preliminary titles)/ Intervenants à ce jour (titres provisoires) :

 

Anne Doquet, IRD & Centre d’études africaines (EHESS)

The anthropologist’s writings: issues around form and content / Les écrits de l’anthropologue : enjeux autour de la forme et du contenu

 

Aïssatou Mbodj-Pouye, Centre d’études africaines (EHESS) & GRS (Univ. Lyon 2)

Writing and the self: an ethnographic approach of personal notebooks held by villagers around Fana (Mali) / Qu’est-ce qu’écrire pour soi ? Approche ethnographique de cahiers personnels recueillis près de Fana (Mali)

 

Francesco Zappa, Università di Roma “La Sapienza”

Islamic printing: a new frontier of written Bambara ? / L’imprimé islamique : nouvelle frontière du bambara écrit ?

 

 

If you are interested, please send an abstract and a working title to Anne Doquet (a.mbodjpouye@free.fr) by February 1, 2008.

Please note that West African colleagues residing in West Africa who wish to compete for funding to attend the conference must submit their papers to Kassim Koné (kone@cortland.edu) by December 31, 2007.

 

Si vous êtes intéressés, veuillez adresser un résumé et une proposition de titre à Anne Doquet (a.mbodjpouye@free.fr) avant le 1/02/2008.

Les chercheurs basés en Afrique de l’Ouest désireux de solliciter le financement de leur venue doivent soumettre leur texte à Kassim Koné (kone@cortland.edu) avant le 31/12/2007.

Posted in AFRICA, African conferences, African languages, African linguistics, LINGUISTICS, Mande | No Comments »

South Africa: 8th international conference on language and development

Posted by sociolingo on August 16, 2007

(NB: Please respond to the conference planners via the website, NOT to Sociolingo!)

08th international conference on language and development

 Date: 1 to 3 October 2007

Venue: University of South Africa, Tshwane (Pretoria), South Africa

http://www.unisa.ac.za/default.asp?Cmd=ViewContent&ContentID=19711

 The aims are to:

* Discuss and debate matters pertaining to language, education and development;

* Identify key areas for collaborative projects and interventions;

* Constitute core teams to pursue collaborative projects;

* Develop joint working and funding proposals.

About the conference

 Language is knowledge. Language is power. Language is a key driver in development – in thesocial, cultural, educational and economic domains. Yet, despite international initiatives to address education, poverty, gender equality, disease, civil conflict and economic growth, millions of people across the globe are marginalized. They exist on the fringe of survival and are denied access to basic necessities which could obviate their suffering and bring new hope.

What role does language play in development?

 What role can language play in addressing urgent global demands? How do we reconcile language development, the hegemony of English, the formation of national identities, demands for democratization and liberalization, and the recognition of individual and cultural rights in a global context? How can language practitioners, educationalists, development specialists and the like, from across the world, collaborate to make a tangible difference to increasing access to knowledge through the development of language?

 The University of South Africa – in association with the Trustees of the Language and Development Conference Series – invite applications from governments, academics, researchers, NGOs, and activists to participate in the 8th International Conference on Language and Development from 1 to 3 October 2007.

 This International Conference will take the following form:

 * Plenary presentations;

* Individual papers addressing the key themes;

* Workshop sessions.

 

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN ACADEMIC, African conferences, African language and education, African language policy, African languages, African linguistic diversity, LINGUISTICS, SOCIOLINGUISTICS | No Comments »

Conference: Documenting Endangered Languages in Africa

Posted by sociolingo on April 17, 2007

Conference: Documenting Endangered Languages in Africa

Posted by sociolingo on 3rd February 2007

Documenting Endangered Languages in Africa

Date: 24-Mar-2007 - 24-Mar-2007
Location: Gainesville, FL, USA
Contact: Brent Henderson
Contact Email: bhendrsnufl.edu
Meeting URL: http://www.doce-conferences.ufl.edu/acal-alta/

Linguistic Field(s): Language Description

Meeting Description:

Symposium at Annual Conference on African Linguistics (ACAL 3 8) and African
Language Teacher’s Association (ALTA 11): ‘Documenting Endangered
Languages in Africa.’

A symposium ”Documenting Endangered Languages in Africa” will be held on
March 24th, 2007 as part of the Annual Conference on African Linguistics (ACAL
3 8) and African Language Teacher’s Association (ALTA 11) at the University of
Florida.

Schedule of talks:
Ronald Schaefer
‘Edo North, residual zones, and language endangerment’

Tucker Childs
‘What happens to class when a language dies? Language changes vs. language
death’

James Essegbey
‘Locative predication in Nyangbo: losing typological characteristics
due to contact’

Salikoko Mufwene
‘Language endangerment: the story from sub-saharan Africa’

Azeb Amha
‘Language and ethnicity: exploring the Zargula and Gamo linkages’

Bruce Connell
‘Language ecology and language endangerment: an instance from the
Nigeria-Cameroon borderland.’

Maarten Mous
‘Language documentation as a challenge to description’

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN ACADEMIC, African conferences, African endangered languages, SOCIOLINGUISTICS | No Comments »