CfP 2023 International Contrastive Linguistics Conference (ICLC-10)

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ICIP 23
Type Conference
Categories (tags) Uncategorized
Dates 2023/07/18 - 2023/07/21
Link
Address
Geolocation 49° 29' 15", 8° 27' 58"
Abstract due
Submission deadline 2023/01/16
Final version due
Notification date
Tweet The 10th Annual International Contrastive Linguistics Conference invites papers from #emca #LSI #EMCAIL participants. Location: Mannheim, Germany. 18-21 July 2023. Submission Deadline: 16.01.2023
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CfP 2023 International Contrastive Linguistics Conference (ICLC-10) First Call for Papers:


Details:

1st Call for Papers - International Contrastive Linguistics Conference (ICLC-10)


The Leibniz Institute for the German Language in Mannheim is pleased to announce the 10th International Contrastive Linguistics Conference (ICLC-10). The conference will take place in Mannheim, Germany, from 18 to 21 July 2023.

The aim of the ICLC conference series, running since 1998, is to encourage fine-grained cross-linguistic research comprising two or more languages from a broad range of theoretical and methodological perspectives. ICLC brings together researchers from different linguistic subfields (and neighboring disciplines) to continue the (interdisciplinary) dialog on comparing languages, to foster the development of an international community, to discuss the state of the art, and to advance possible new areas of cross-linguistic research. Contrastive Linguistics as a linguistic subfield has had a checkered history, but comparative and contrastive work has always been and continues to be an important part of linguistic research. New impulses for comparative and contrastive work include the increasing availability of multilingual corpora or comparative work drawing on naturalistic interaction data. At this anniversary edition of ICLC, we want to provide a stage for the presentation of such new work, and reflect the past, current and future developments of contrastive research in linguistics.


We invite contributions addressing (meta)theoretical, methodological or empirical issues, such as (but not limited to) the following:


Comparison of phenomena in two or more languages addressing topics from any area and level of linguistic analysis, including lexicon, phonetics and phonology, morphology, syntax and morphosyntax, semantics, pragmatics as well as matters such as register and socio-cultural context

The state of the art and recent advances in contrastive linguistic research

The aims, objectives and scope of contrastive linguistic research

The status of contrastive research within linguistic studies and its relationship with neighbouring or complementary approaches such as historical, typological, micro-variationist, intercultural and contact linguistics

The link between contrastive studies and fields of applied linguistics such as foreign language teaching and learning, translation studies and corpus linguistics

Potentials and limits of theoretical frameworks in relation to contrastive analysis (e.g., functional, cognitive, interactional, generative, constructional approaches)

Theoretical and theoretical-methodological issues (comparability, incommensurability, the socio-cultural context, tertia comparationis, language universals)

Empirical and data-related methodological issues (parallel / translation corpora, comparable corpora, learner corpora, multimodal corpora, naturalistic data of face-to-face interaction, psycho- and neurolinguistic experiments, surveys)

The significance of the contrastive perspective for language-specific description on the one hand and for cross-linguistic generalizations and the development of linguistic theory on the other hand


Some of these issues will be addressed by five invited keynote speakers.

Confirmed keynote speakers are:

Artemis Alexiadou (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin and Leibniz-Centre for General Linguistics, Germany)

Jenny Audring (Leiden University, The Netherlands)

Elwys De Stefani (University of Heidelberg, Germany, and KU Leuven, Belgium)

Martin Haspelmath (Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Germany)

Hilde Hasselgård (University of Oslo, Norway)


There will be a possibility to publish selected papers in a conference volume.

Submission of Abstracts

We invite submissions for 20-minute oral presentations (plus 10 minutes for discussion). Abstracts should formulate a clear research question and include a description of the methods, results and conclusions. All submissions will be reviewed anonymously by at least two reviewers.

All submissions must be in English, fully anonymous, and no longer than one page (12 point Times New Roman), with up to one additional page for data, figures and references. Abstracts will be submitted via the EasyChair system. Further details on the submission procedure, registration and practical information will be announced in the 2nd call.

Submission deadline: 16.01.2023


Organizing Committee:


Beata Trawinski (Chair) Marc Kupietz Kristel Proost Jörg Zinken