Date: Tue, 10 Jan 1995 09:13:45 -0500

From: Shari Kendall KENDALLS[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]GUVAX.BITNET

Subject: GLS 1995: Developments in Discourse Analysis



updated 1/10/95 (includes speakers and paper titles)



**********



The Georgetown Linguistics Society

presents



GLS 1995: DEVELOPMENTS IN DISCOURSE ANALYSIS



**********



February 17-19, 1995

Georgetown University, Washington D.C.



GLS 1995: DEVELOPMENTS IN DISCOURSE ANALYSIS is an interdisciplinary

conference featuring presentations and colloquia focusing on a variety

of topics in discourse analysis, ranging from discourse analytic theory

to the use of discourse analysis as a tool in other disciplines. Papers

address discourse in the media, the workplace, the classroom, everyday

conversation, and in therapeutic, political, legal, religious, and other

institutional contexts, addressing such areas as gender,identity, argument,

authority, and narrative. The discourse analytic approaches include

interactional sociolinguistics, critical discourse analysis, ethnography,

conversation analysis, and cognitive science. The conference presenters,

paper titles, and plenary speakers are provided below in this announcement.





**HOW TO CONTACT GLS 1995**



Requests for information, including information about TRANSPORTATION,

ACCOMODATIONS, and a DISCOUNT ON AIRFARE, may be addressed to the

Georgetown Linguistics Society:



GLS 1995 gls[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]guvax.georgetown.edu

Georgetown University gls[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]guvax.bitnet

Department of Linguistics 202-687-6166

479 Intercultural Center

Washington, D.C. 20057-1068



Regularly updated information about GLS 1995 is also available

through the World-Wide Web Georgetown Linguistics Home Page:

http://www.georgetown.edu/cball/gu_lx.html





**REGISTRATION**



____________________________________________________



PRE-REGISTRATION FORM FOR **GLS 1995**



Please complete and print this form or provide the required information

on another sheet of paper and mail to GLS 1995, Georgetown University,

Department of Linguistics, 479 Intercultural Center, Washington, D.C.

20057-1068



Name:

Affiliation:

Mailing address:

E-mail address:

Phone number:



Registration Fee.

Please remit the appropriate registration fee in the form of a

check or money order made payable to "Georgetown University":



Student Non-Student

Preregistration (through Feb. 10) $20.00 $30.00

On-site registration $30.00 $40.00



Attendance Needs



( ) American Sign Language interpretation



( ) crash space (first-come basis)



( ) other (please specify)

______________________________________________________





**CONFERENCE SCHEDULE**



Friday, February 17 2:00 pm to 7:45 pm, Reception at 8:00 pm

Saturday, February 18 9:30 am to 7:15 pm

Sunday, February 19 9:30 am to 5:00 pm





**PLENARY SPEAKERS**



*Frederick Erickson, University of Pennsylvania



*Charles Goodwin, University of South Carolina



*Heidi Hamilton, Georgetown University



*Deborah Schiffrin, Georgetown University



*Roger Shuy, Georgetown University



*Deborah Tannen, Georgetown University





**COLLOQUIA**



DISCOURSE AND CONFLICT (Coordinator: Christina Kakava)

*Faye C. McNair-Knox

Discourse and conflict in African-American English womantalk:

Patterns of grammaticalized disapproval in narratives

*Christina Kakava

Evaluation in personal and vicarious stories: Mirror of a Greek

man's self

*Patricia E. O'Connor

'You can't keep a man down': Positioning in conflict talk and in

violent acts

*Laine Berman

Life stories from the streets: Homeless children's narratives

of violence and the construction of a better world



DEVELOPMENTS IN CONVERSATION ANALYSIS: OH, WHAT,OR, PARDON

(Coordinator: Maria Egbert)

*Paul Drew

'What'?: A sequential basis for an 'open' form of repair initiation

in conversation (and some implications for cognitive approaches

to interaction)

*Maria Egbert

The relevance of interactants' eye gaze to the organization of

other-initiated repair: The case of German 'bitte?' ('pardon?')

*Anna Lindstrom

'Or'-constructed inquiries as a resource for probing the relevance

of prior talk in Swedish conversation

*John Heritage

'Oh'-prefaced responses to inquiry



DEVELOPMENTS IN SIGNED LANGUAGE DISCOURSE (Coordinator: Melanie Metzger)

*Ruth Morgan

The interplay of place and space in a Namibian Sign Language

narrative

*Kathleen Wood

Negotiating literate identities: Life stories of deaf students

*Susan M. Mather

Adult-deaf toddler discourse

*Tina M. Neumann

Figurative language in an American Sign Language poem:

Personification and prosopopoeia

*Scott Liddell and Melanie Metzger

Spatial mapping in an ASL Narrative: Examining the use of

multiple surrogate spaces

*Elizabeth A. Winston

Spatial mapping in comparative discourse frames in American

Sign Language



FRAMES THEORY (Coordinator: Janice Hornyak)

*Janice Hornyak

Personal and professional frames in office discourse

*Susan Hoyle

Negotiation of footing in play

*Carolyn Kinney

The interaction of frames, roles and footings: Conversational

strategies of co-leaders in a long-term group

*Yoshiko Nakano

Interplay of expectations in cross-cultural miscommunication: A

case study of negotiations between Americans and Japanese

*Suwako Watanabe

Framing in group discussion: A comparison between Japanese and

American students





**PAPER SESSIONS**



NEGOTIATING AUTHORITY AND STATUS

*Cynthia Dickel Dunn

The language of the tea teacher: Shifting indexical ground in a

Japanese pedagogical context

*Lena Gavruseva

'What is this drivel about garages?': The construction of

authoritative self in the cover letter discourse

*Geoffrey Raymond

The voice of authority: Sequence and turn design in live news

broadcasts

*Hideko Nornes Abe

Discourse analysis on distal and direct styles of Japanese

women's speech



WILL THE REAL AUTHOR PLEASE STAND UP?: EXPLOITING THE SPEECH OF OTHERS

*Richard Buttny

Talking race on campus: Reported speech in accounts of race

relations at a university campus

*Akira Satoh

Reported speech in English and Japanese: A comparative analysis

*Joyce Tolliver

Evidentiality and accountability in literary narrative



INTERPRETING, CHALLENGING, EVALUATING GENDER

*Jennifer Curtis

Contestation of masculine identities in a battering intervention

program

*Keller S. Magenau

More than feminine: Attending to power and social distance

dimensions in spoken and written workplace communication

*Keli Yerian

Male and female TV directors talking on the air and off

*Donna Trousdale

Social languages and privileging: Gender and school science

discourse



DISCOURSE INFLUENCES ON SYNTACTIC CATEGORIES AND STRUCTURES

*Jennifer Arnold

The interaction between discourse focus and verbal form in

Mapudungun

*Rajesh Bhatt

Information status and word order in Hindi

*Paul Hopper

Discourse and the category 'verb' in English



DISCURSIVE ENACTMENTS OF CULTURAL IDEOLOGIES

*Isolda Carranza

Stance-making in oral interviews

*Agnes Weiyun He

Stories as interactional resources: Narrative activity in academic

counseling encounters

*Shari E. Kendall

Religion and experience: Constructed dialogue, narrative, and

life story in religious testimonies



POLITICAL, INTELLECTUAL, INSTITUTIONAL IDENTITIES

*Anna De Fina

Pronominal choice, identity and solidarity in political discourse

*Charlotte Linde

Other people's stories: Third person narrative in individual and

group identity

*Karen Tracy

The identity work of questioning in intellectual discussion



COMPUTATIONAL APPROACHES TO DISCOURSE ANALYSIS

*Megan Moser and Johanna D. Moore

An approach to the study of discourse cues

*Yan Qu

A computational approach for automatically extracting discourse

rules

*Donald Lewis

Theme and eventline in a Classical Hebrew narrative: A

computer-assisted analysis



COMPETING DISCOURSES AND DOMINANCE

*Tony Hak

'She has clear delusions': The production of a factual account

*Catherine F. Smith

Democratic discourses

*John Clark

Standard and vernacular: Persuasive discourse styles in conflict

*Kathryn Remlinger

Keeping it straight: The socio-linguistic construction of a

heterosexual ideology in a campus community



INTERACTIONAL CONSTRUCTION OF COGNITIVE UNDERSTANDING

*Pamela W. Jordan and Megan Moser

Global coordination in computer-mediated conversation

*Claudia Roncarati

Repetition and cognition in the information flow: A case-study

in Brazilian Portuguese database

*Andrea Tyler and John Bro

Examining perceptions of text comprehensibility: The effect of

order and contextualization cues

*Toshiko Hamaguchi

Manifestation of shared knowledge in conversation



HUMOROUS FACES

*Nancy K. Baym

Humorous performance in a computer-mediated group

*Diana Boxer and Florencia Cortes-Conde

Teasing that bonds: Conversational joking and identity display



CONVERSATIONAL MOVES

*C. Antaki, F. Diaz, A. Collins

Participants' orientation to footing: Evidence from conversational

completion

*Peter Muntigl

Saving face in argument: An analysis of face-threatening

disagreements

*Martin Warren

How do conversations begin and end?



INTERACTIONAL EXPLANATIONS FOR PATTERNS OF VARIATION

*Scott Fabius Kiesling

Using interactional discourse analysis to explain variation

*Sylvie Dubois

The coherent network of effects on discourse



PRIVILEGED VIEWS IN MEDIA DISCOURSE

*Gertraud Benke

News about news: Textual features of news agency copies and

their usage in the newsproduction

*Debra Graham

Racism in the reporting of the O.J. Simpson arrest: A critical

discourse analysis approach

*Ian Hutchby

Arguments and asymmetries on talk radio

*Joanna Thornborrow

Talk shows and democratic discourse



NARRATIVE STRUCTURES ACROSS LANGUAGES

*Viola G. Miglio

Tense alternations in medieval prose texts

*Asli Ozyurek

How children use connectives to talk about a conversation

*Marybeth Culley

Rhetorical elaborations of a Chiricahua Apache comic narrative

genre



PRIOR DISCOURSES AND THE STRUCTURE OF CLASSROOM INTERACTION

*Mary Buchinger Bodwell

"Now what does that mean, 'first draft'?": Adult literacy

classes and alternative models of editing a text

*Deborah Poole

The effects of text on talk in a classroom literacy event

*Myriam Torres

Why teachers do not engage in co-construction of knowledge:

A critical discourse analysis





**UPCOMING GEORGETOWN CONFERENCES**



Georgetown Round Table on Languages and Linguistics 1995. "Linguistics

and the Education of Second Language Teachers: Ethnolinguistic,

Psycholinguistic, and Sociolinguistic Aspects." Pre-sessions and

conference, March 6-11, 1995. Contact: Carolyn A. Straehle,

202-687-5726, gurt[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]guvax.georgetown.edu, GURT 1995, 303 ICC, Washington,

D.C. 20057-1067.



(This announcement). Georgetown Linguistics Society (GLS) 1995:

Developments in Discourse Analysis. February 17-19, 1995. Contact:

Coordinators of GLS 1995, 202-687-6166, gls[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]guvax.georgetown.edu,

GLS 1995, 479 ICC, Washington, D. C. 20057-1068.



End of announcement. Please distribute as widely as possible.

Thank you.