11th Conference (2009 Melbourne) 
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11th IPC program

In this program, all contributions are coded as follows :

  • the first digit (1, 2, 3, 4, or 5) refers to the day (1 = Monday, etc.)
  • the second digit (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) refers to the time slot in the program (1= 8:30 to 10:00 [except on Monday, when we start at 9:00], etc., see the program overview); papers coded 4-4 are all posters
  • the third digit (01 to 12) refers to the room
    • all plenary sessions will be held in the Copland Theatre of the Economics  & Commerce building
    • all parallel sessions will be held in Babel, Economics  & Commerce and Old Arts (see the map on the inside front cover of the print version); numbers are as follows:

Number

Location

01

Babel-106 (Middle Theatrette)

02

Babel-G03 (Lower Theatrette)

03

Economics  & Commerce (Prest Theatrette)

04

Economics  & Commerce-G11 (Theatrette 1)

05

Economics  & Commerce-G12 (Theatrette 2)

06

Economics  & Commerce-G13 (Theatrette 3)

07

Economics  & Commerce-Wood Theatre

08

Old Arts-Theatre A

09

Old Arts-Theatre B

10

Old Arts-Theatre C

11

Old Arts-Theatre D

12

Old Arts-Theatre E

  • the final digit (1, 2, 3, 4) refers to the order of appearance within a time slot
     note that only lectures follow a fixed pattern of 20 minutes presentation and 5 to 10 minutes discussion; within panels, the distribution across available time is up to the coordinator

This program contains four very different types of events:

  • Plenary lectures : 45-minute presentations; speakers may fill up the entire period or choose to leave a little time for questions.
  • Lectures : individual presentations following a strict format of 20 minutes + 5 to 10 minutes  of discussion; lecture sessions typically contain 3 consecutive presentations; for ‘ underbooked’  sessions with only two presenations, speakers are urged to stick to the format described so that participants know what is happening when; in the case of further cancellations, the scheduled order of presentation should be preserved
  • Posters : put up on poster boards from Monday onwards, with an exclusive poster period in the afternoon on Thursday; authors are expected to be present at their poster during that period.
  • Panels : pre-organized thematic events; the program gives an order in which presentations will be made, but the format may differ greatly from panel to panel (as also the number of speakers varies within given 90-minute time slots); participants are advised not to switch between panels, as this will most probably not get them wht they are looking for anyway.


SUNDAY, 12 July 2009

 

15:00-18:00    Conference registration

 

 

MONDAY, 13 July 2009

 

8:00     Conference registration opens

 

 

9:00-10:30      Conferece opening and first plenary lecture

                        Chair: Keith Allan (Conference chair)

 

1-1      Peter Sutton , Giving away language: Praxis versus ideology in the loss of linguistic diversity

 

 

10:30-11:00    Coffee break

 

 

11:00-12:00    Plenary

                        Chair: Leo Kretzenbacher

 

1-2      Ingrid Piller , Language learning, multilingualism and social inclusion

 

12:00-13:30    Lunch

 

 

13:30-15:00    Parallel sessions

 

1-3-01      Panel: ChantalClaudel , Experiencing, expressing, expecting and using emotions: Cross-cultural discourse studies in six languages
1-3-01-1     ChantalClaudel, Linguistic expression and semiotic translation of emotions in French and Japanese personal emails
1-3-01-2     GeorgetaCislaru, Fear: polarity and scalarity in French and Romanian
1-3-01-3     Patriciavon Münchow, Expected emotions towards the child in French, German and US-American parental guidebooks

1-3-02      Panel: Akira Satoh & Zane Goebel , Semiosis, Identities and Narratives in Cross/Multicultural Settings
1-3-02-1     AkiraSatoh & Yuuki Arita, Performing identity through constructed dialogue in small stories of cross-cultural contact
1-3-02-2     ZaneGoebel, Social conduct, small stories and identity in transient settings
1-3-02-3     YoshikazuWatanabe, Stutterers' identity negotiation through narrative discourseYoshikazu C. Watanabe

1-3-03        Lecture session : Conversational structure
1-3-03-1      Maria Eleonora Sciubba , Interactional gestures as a resource for the management of turn taking
1-3-03-2    HosseinShokouhi, Overlaps in Persian and English casual conversation: a focus on backchannels
1-3-03-3     HideyukiSugiura, Type of Agreement and Turn Design in Japanese Conversation

1-3-04        Lecture session : Conversation in context 1
1-3-04-1      David Aline & Yuri Hosoda , Development of EFL teacher trainee classroom interactional practices: A longitudinal study
1-3-04-2     DonBysouth & Sohail Jeloos-Haghi, Collateral damage: An investigation of non-combatant teasing by American service personnel in occupied Iraq and Afghanistan
1-3-04-3     FabienneChevalier, Managing Impartiality in French Tourist Office-Client Telephone Interaction

1-3-05        Lecture session : Language and identity 1
1-3-05-1      John Wilson & Karyn Stapleton , Narrative pragmatics: The big story about small stories of crime and terrorism
1-3-05-2     RukminiBhaya Nair, The pragmatics and poetics of racial difference
1-3-05-3     JanZienkowski, Towards a rearticuation of linguistic pragmatics and poststructuralist thought on identity, context and structure: the case of evolving political identities of Moroccan minorities in Antwerp (Belgium)

1-3-06        Lecture session : Code-switching
1-3-06-1      Galina Chirsheva , How Russian students do things with code-switching
1-3-06-2     EmileeMoore & Luci Nussbaum, Codeswitching in higher education: the interplay between policies and practices and how codeswitching contributes to the construction of knoweldge
1-3-06-3     TomokoTokita & Kohji Shibano, Language Biased Memory Hypothesis in Intrasentential Code-Switching

1-3-07      Panel: Polly Szatrowski , Experiencing food through language and the body in Japanese and English
1-3-07-1     CourtneyDolinar-Hikawa & Polly Szatrowski, Loanwords and cultural identity in Japanese and English conversations about food
1-3-07-2     MarikoKaratsu, Sharing a personal discovery of a taste using the demonstrative pronoun are ‘that thing (we both know)’ in Japanese conversation
1-3-07-3     PollySzatrowski, Compliments to the chef: Food assessments in Japanese conversation
1-3-07-4     ChisatoKoike, Construction of identity, concepts, and the world through talk about and over food in Japanese

1-3-08        Lecture session : Language and ideology
1-3-08-1      Anne Mäntynen , Translation process and the construction of norms and language ideologies
1-3-08-2     JieZhang, The ideologies of English language learning and teaching in the identity construction of Beijing as Olympic city
1-3-08-3     CatrinNorrby & Gisela Håkansson, ‘This is our Swedish’ – interactional and grammatical variation among adolescent speakers of different backgrounds

1-3-09        Lecture session : Gender and identity
1-3-09-1      Svetlana Grushina , Sexual Identity in Informal Interactions
1-3-09-2     ManalIsmail, Colloquial speech: A gender marker in Saudi Arabia
1-3-09-3     KaoriMiyatake & Kohji Shibano, How gender and topic relate to speech-style choice in Japanese conversation between friends

1-3-10        Lecture session : Identity in context
1-3-10-1      Chie Fukuda , Identity as a product of development of talk-in-interaction: in case of food talks
1-3-10-2     Yvonne Chi WanLoong, Identity in English academic writing as understood by postgraduates in Hong Kong

1-3-11      Panel: Alan Dench & Lesley Stirling , Tense, aspect, modality and evidentiality in discourse — Australian languages [Part 1 of 3]
1-3-11-1     AlanDench, Marie-Eve Ritz  & Patrick Caudal, Past time and present relevance in Panyjima: uses of the past, perfect and passive perfect in discourse
1-3-11-2     LesleyStirling, Tense and aspect shifts in Kala Lagaw Ya oral narratives
1-3-11-3     AlanDench, Patrick Caudal  & Marie-Eve Ritz, An aspectual/actional account of Australian conjugational classes

1-3-12      Panel: KyokoOhara & Jan-Ola Östman , Pragmatics in constructions and frames [Part 1 of 3](Discussant: Yoshiko Matsumoto)
1-3-12-1     KyokoOhara & Jan-Ola Östman, Introduction: Pragmatics in constructions and frames
1-3-12-2     RussellLee-Goldman, Josef Ruppenhofer, Michael Ellsworth  & Collin Baker, Pragmatic factors in null instantiation: beyond definiteness and genre
1-3-12-3     KyokoOhara, Interactions between constructions, frames, and pragmatics: a perspective-providing constructions in Japanese

 

 

15:00-15:30    Coffee break

 

15:30-17:00    Parallel sessions

 

1-4-01      Panel: Claire Maree , Identities crossing gender/sexuality in multicultural/multilingual settings: Negotiating ideologies of women’s/men’s language
1-4-01-1     ClaireMaree, Queer eye for the straight girl?― Queer(y)ing speech and the politics of consumption
1-4-01-2     ShigekoKumagai, Don't mock at native speakers of dialects!
1-4-01-3     MomokoNakamura, Negotiating gender/sexual identities
1-4-01-4     KyokoSatoh, Conversation of young females from the perspective of Japanese sociocultural norms

1-4-02      Panel: Martha Shiro & Barbara Bokus , Argumentative strategies in children's discourse
1-4-02-1     Rosa GracielaMontes, Rejections and refusals: an analysis of children’s dispreferred responses
1-4-02-2     JolantaRytel, Functions of argumentation in preschoolers’ narrative discourse
1-4-02-3     BarbaraBokus & Tomasz Garstka, Children’s argumentation in the sharing of metaphoric meanings
1-4-02-4     AnnaMilanowicz, Child argumentation in solving moral dilemmas

1-4-03        Lecture session : Coherence
1-4-03-1      Helmut Gruber , Coherence relations in Austrian students’ texts
1-4-03-2     VerenaJung, The problem of defining explicitation and other shifts in English-German coherence structure – how to compare and assess different coherence strategies in English and German originals and translations.
1-4-03-3     MarinaGrasso, The pragmatic value of frequent expressions among the young: the case

1-4-04        Lecture session : Conversation in context 2
1-4-04-1      Libby Clark , Mining the potential of the 3rd turn: Sequential action in speech therapy talk-in-interaction
1-4-04-2     YuriHosoda & David Aline, Orientation to “noise” in classroom peer discussion tasks
1-4-04-3     SaschaRixon, Transitions in group facilitation

1-4-05        Lecture session : Language and identity 2
1-4-05-1      Monika Bednarek , ‘I’m just afraid I’ll get too emotional’: Analyzing interpersonal identity in American dramedy
1-4-05-2     EllenCray, Defining the newcomer to Canada:  the fluidity of attributed identity
1-4-05-3     ConstanceEllwood, “When we are not really French”: Complex identities in the language classroom

1-4-06        Lecture session : Language choice
1-4-06-1      Francesco Goglia , Language Choices and language mixing among Igbo-Nigerians in Italy
1-4-06-2     Salikoko S.Mufwene, Salikoko S. Mufwene  & Cécile B. Vigouroux, Multilingual Setting, Multilingual Speakers: Exploring the Pragmatics of Language Choice
1-4-06-3    SirpaLeppänen & Arja Piirainen-Marsh, Linguistic and stylistic variability in a bilingual gaming activity: Animation and stylization of game characters’ talk

1-4-07      Panel: Alexis Tabensky & Jane Orton , Gesture, cognition and social action [Part 1 of 2]
1-4-07-1     BarbaraKelly, Redundancy in infant gesture-speech communication
1-4-07-2     AliceRouse, Gender, gesture and simultaneous speech - a multi-modal investigation
1-4-07-3     AmandaBayliss, EFL gesture use and impression formation
1-4-07-4     JaneOrton, Not Such An Equal Partner – kinesics and Chinese learners’ English

1-4-08      Panel: Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen & Margret Selting , Affectivity in conversational storytelling [Part 1 of 2]
1-4-08-1     ElizabethCouper-Kuhlen, Emotional reciprocity in storytelling: How much is enough?
1-4-08-2     MichaelBamberg, Positioning emotion -- Connecting the there-and-then of the story world with the interactive here-and-now

1-4-09      Panel: Satomi Kuroshima, Shimako Iwasaki  & Jae-Eun Park , Projection within the emerging TCU: Cross-linguistic perspectives on turn construction [Part 1 of 2]
1-4-09-1     H. StephanieKim, Turn design and action projection: Prefacing a turn with "well"
1-4-09-2     XiaotingLi, Prosody and turn organization in Chinese conversation
1-4-09-3     LeeloKeevallik, Projecting nouns and clauses with pro-forms

1-4-10      Panel: Ludmilla A'Beckett, Soonhee Frayssee-Kim  & Ghil'ad Zuckermann , ‘Othering’ in various languages and cultures: Linguistic tools of alienation [Part 1 of 2]
1-4-10-1     Ghil'adZuckermann, The Weapon of the Weak (and the Strong): "EtyMYTHological Othering" and the Empowerment of "Lexical Engineering" in Judaism, Islam and Christianity
1-4-10-2     SoonheeFraysse Kim, A shrunk universe : North Korea’s “Earthly Paradise”
1-4-10-3     LudmillaA'Beckett, The BROTHERS metaphor in Russian discourse: a sign of alienation or of FAMILY unity?
1-4-10-4     Maria José R.Faria Coracini, Hospitality and linguistic-cultural strangeness: the case of migrators in Brazil

1-4-11      Panel: Alan Dench & Lesley Stirling , Tense, aspect, modality and evidentiality in discourse — Australian languages [Part 2 of 3]
1-4-11-1     AliceGaby, How Kuuk Thaayorre speakers can encode mood (if they want to)
1-4-11-2     IlanaMushin, Evidential strategies in a language without Evidentiality: Evidence from Garrwa discourse
1-4-11-3     RachelNordlinger, Serialised aspect in Murrinh-Patha

1-4-12      Panel: Kyoko Ohara & Jan-Ola Östman , Pragmatics in constructions and frames [Part 2 of 3](Discussant: Yoshiko Matsumoto)
1-4-12-1     MirjamFried, Reported speech without verbs of reporting in colloquial Czech
1-4-12-2     BrachaNir-Sagiv, The Pragmatics of figure-ground constructions in narrative discourse
1-4-12-3     YokoHasegawa, Object-Centered vs. Event-Centered Encoding: A FrameNet Account
1-4-12-4     JosefRuppenhofer & Laura A. Michaelis, A constructional account of genre-based argument omissions

 

 

17:00-17:15    Short break

 

 

17:15-18:45    Parallel sessions

 

1-5-01      Panel: Jakob Cromdal & Ilkka Arminen , Talk in emergency work: calls for help and response dispatch
1-5-01-1     JakobCromdal & Karin Osvaldsson, Trouble locating trouble: How problems of locating accidents are dealt with in mobile phone emergency calls
1-5-01-2     IlkkaArminen & Tiia Vaajala, On routines and complications of sequential organization of emergency dispatch in Finland
1-5-01-3     NozomiIkeya, Taking recipient design seriously in the context of emergency medical services
1-5-01-4     DavidRandall & Morten Petterson, The Organizational Production of Timely Interventions

1-5-02      Panel: Miyuki Tani , Is English result-oriented and Japanese process-oriented?: Empirical analyses of “fashions of speaking”
1-5-02-1     MiyukiTani, The orientations of language in literary works: Japanese novels and their English translations
1-5-02-2     IppeiInoue, The orientations of English and Japanese politeness
1-5-02-3     NaohiroTatara, Metaphors and preferred rhetorical styles in English and Japanese news discourse
1-5-02-4     HirotoshiYagihashi, Homology of the structures of language and promotion strategy

1-5-03        Lecture session : Connectives
1-5-03-1      Ana Cristina Macário Lopes , From time to condition: the polyfonctionality of the connective "desde que" in European contemporary Portuguese
1-5-03-2     MichikoTakeuchi, Clause coordination in English and Japanese: A case study of AND and SOSITE/SOREDE ''and''

1-5-04        Lecture session : Conversational acts
1-5-04-1      Elisa Guimarães , Talking Acts at Advising Speech
1-5-04-2     EkbergStuart & Amanda LeCouteur, Making modifications to service arrangements: action formation and recipient design in community aged care service calls

1-5-05        Lecture session: Language and identity 3
1-5-05-1      Xinren Chen , Interpersonalization in Public Discourses: A Pragmatic Perspective
1-5-05-2     ValerieWilliams, Lisa Ponting  & Kerrie Ford, From individual to collective voice: people with intellectual disabilities as researchers.
1-5-05-3     JoAngouri & Meredith Marra, Don’t you know who I am? Corporate meetings and professional identity.

1-5-06        Lecture session : Anaphora
1-5-06-1      Takahiro Otsu , Procedural Information of Anaphoric Expressions:
1-5-06-2     TakeshiTsurusaki, Backwards anaphora and the extended Independence Principle

1-5-07      Panel: Alexis Tabensky & Jane Orton , Gesture, cognition and social action [Part 2 of 2]
1-5-07-1     BettinaBoss, Gestures used for description in L2 German expository talk
1-5-07-2     KyriakiFrantzi & Alexis Tabenski, Gestures used for narratives in L2 Greek oral presentations
1-5-07-3     AlexisTabensky, How the palm up hand is used in oral presentations

1-5-08      Panel: Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen & Margret Selting , Affectivity in conversational storytelling [Part 2 of 2]
1-5-08-1     MargretSelting, The verbal and vocal signalling of affectivity in storytelling in telephone conversation – some case studies
1-5-08-2     AnnWeatherall & Maria Stubbe, Affiliation during complaint calls in institutional talk
1-5-08-3     MariaStubbe, Unanswered questions about affectivity in storytelling

1-5-09      Panel: Satomi Kuroshima, Shimako Iwasaki  & Jae-Eun Park , Projection within the emerging TCU: Cross-linguistic perspectives on turn construction [Part 2 of 2]
1-5-09-1     SatomiKuroshima, Projectability in a single-action, multi-unit turn in Japanese: Recipient’s action of interpolation
1-5-09-2     Jae-EunPark, The constructability of turn units in Korean conversations
1-5-09-3     ShimakoIwasaki, Incomplete turns in Japanese conversation: Local action projection and the strategic negotiation of stance

1-5-10      Panel: Ludmilla A'Beckett, Soonhee Frayssee-Kim  & Ghil'ad Zuckermann , ‘Othering’ in various languages and cultures: Linguistic tools of alienation [Part 2 of 2]
1-5-10-1     ClaudiaMonacelli, Threats to face and empowerment in an interpreter-mediated event
1-5-10-2     NadineThielemann, Doing out-group by doing in-group in Russian and Ukrainian women’s conflict style
1-5-10-3     LutgardLams, Language of empowerment and alienation in The China Daily accounts about the April 2001 standoff between the US and China

1-5-11      Panel: Alan Dench & Lesley Stirling , Tense, aspect, modality and evidentiality in discourse — Australian languages [Part 3 of 3]
1-5-11-1     EvaSchultze-Berndt & Martina Faller, “The dog is sniffing the rock, as you and I can see.” The Jaminjung first person dual inclusive pronoun as a deictic evidential strategy
1-5-11-2     RuthSinger, A re-analysis of the meaning of an irrealis TAM suffix in Mawng
1-5-11-3     Jean-ChristopheVerstraete, TAM shifts and narrative structure in Umpithamu

1-5-12      Panel: Kyoko Ohara & Jan-Ola Östman , Pragmatics in constructions and frames [Part 3 of 3](Discussant: Yoshiko Matsumoto)
1-5-12-1     Jan-OlaÖstman, Between frames and discourse patterns: A constructional approach to Responsibility
1-5-12-2     RitvaLaury & Shigeko Okamoto, Pragmatic functions of English I mean and Japanese teyuuka as grammatical constructions
1-5-12-3     MikaShindo, Constructional Change Accompanying Increase of Modal Intensification: A Cross-linguistic Study of Visual Adjectives

 

 

19:00 WELCOME RECEPTION offered by John Benjamins in the Grand Buffet Hall

 

 

TUESDAY, 14 July 2009

 

8:00     Conference registration opens

 

 

8:30-10:00      Parallel sessions

 

2-1-01      Panel: Neal R. Norrick & Kerstin Fischer , Listener activities [Part 1 of 4]
2-1-01-1     Karen L.Adams, Getting Heard: Politeness Strategies for Marginalized Debate Participants
2-1-01-2     GisleAndersen, Responses in academic and professional discourse
2-1-01-3     AnnetteMoennich, Forms and functions of listener behaviors in ''feedback communication''

 

2-1-02      Panel: NicoleBaumgarten, Svenja Kranich  & Inke Du Bois , Subjectivity in discourse [Part 1 of 4]
2-1-02-1     SusanFitzmaurice, The construction of subjectivity in two historical communities of practice
2-1-02-2     VictorinaGonzalez-Diaz, Literature and subjectivisation: The case of Jane Austen
2-1-02-3     RachelleWaksler, Super, uber, so, and totally: Over-the-top intensifiers as subjectivity markers in colloquial discourse

2-1-03        Lecture session : Media and political discourse 1
2-1-03-1      Toshiaki Furukawa & Gavin K. Furukawa , “You just gotta sit down ku:ka:”: Membership categorization in a Local talk show in Hawai‘i
2-1-03-2     MonicaAznarez, The Functions of Recipiency Markers in a Particular Kind of Spanish TV Interview
2-1-03-3     LidiaTanaka, Delivery and Reception of Advice in Japanese Radio Call-in Programs

2-1-04        Lecture session : Referring 1
2-1-04-1      Keith Allan , The pragmatic act of referring to ‘what counts as the referent’
2-1-04-2     JingChen, Yicheng Wu  & Huaxin Huang, The pragmatics of deferred reference
2-1-04-3     ThorsteinFretheim, On the truth-conditional irrelevance of the descriptive content of noun phrases

2-1-05    Lecture session: Pragmatics & visual media 1

2-1-05-1      Roberta Piazza , The pragmatics of men’s talk in the 1960s Westerns: John Wayne versus Clint Eastwood
2-1-05-2     MariaPavesi, Address strategies in film dubbing from English into Italian
2-1-05-3     FabioRossi, Pragmatic analysis of film dialogues: Italian comedy between linguistic realism and pragmatic non-realism

2-1-06        Lecture session: Speech acts 1
2-1-06-1      Francesca Carota, Andres Posada, Sylvain Harquel, Claude Delpuech  & Angela Sirigu , Cortical dynamics underlying the intentions behind speech-acts: a MEG study
2-1-06-2     YongpingRan, Ostensible Invitations and Their Interpersonal Adaptability in Chinese Interaction
2-1-06-3     Hui-chen (Jane)Hsu, Chinese compliment responses: A study of Taiwanese college students

2-1-07      Panel: YulingPan & Dániel Z. Kádár , Chinese discourse and interaction: Theory and practice [Part 1 of 4]
2-1-07-1     WeiZhang & Angela Chan, Delaying the next item due in conversation: GE and DE in Cantonese and Mandarin self-repair
2-1-07-2     TomokoEndo, Epistemic Stance in Mandarin Conversation: The Positions and Functions of Wo juede “I think”
2-1-07-3     HongyinTao, Lexicon in interaction: The cases of epistemic markers in Mandarin Chinese

2-1-08      Panel: Susan Danby & Jakob Cromdal , The interactional practices of children in institutional contexts [Part 1 of 2]
2-1-08-1     GillianBusch, Mealtime: Choices about topic - considering co-participants
2-1-08-2     AmeliaChurch, Getting the floor: How young children talk to teachers.
2-1-08-3     ChristinaDavidson, Accomplishing help: The social organization of children’s activity during a writing lesson

2-1-09      Panel: Haruko Minegishi Cook , Negotiating linguistic politeness in Japanese interaction: A critical examination of honorifics [Part 1 of 2]
2-1-09-1     MutsukoEndo Hudson, Negotiating Linguistic Politeness in Student-Professor Conversation in Japanese
2-1-09-2     HarukoMinegishi Cook, Politeness and Uses of Honorifics in a Japanese Committee Meeting
2-1-09-3     ShigekoOkamoto, Situated Meanings of Honorific and Plain Forms in Japanese

2-1-10      Panel: Luisa Martín Rojo & Rosina Márquez Reiter , Sociolinguistic and pragmatic aspects of institutional discourse: Service encounters in multilingual and multicultural contexts [Part 1 of 2]
2-1-10-1     RosinaMarquez Reiter, “A ella no le gusta que le digan María y a mí que me traten de tú” The case of a service call between speakers of Spanishes. A window into Latin American diversity
2-1-10-2     GabrielaPrego-Vázquez, Code-switching and frame manipulation in professional discourse
2-1-10-3     IsabelGómez Díez, The interpreter as gatekeeper in asylum hearings in Madrid (Spain)

2-1-11      Panel: Sage Lambert Graham & Miriam Locher , (Im)politeness in computer-mediated communication (CMC) [Part 1 of 2]
2-1-11-1     Miriam A.Locher, Introduction to (Im)Politeness in Computer-mediated Communication
2-1-11-2     Sage LambertGraham, Constructing ''polite'' identities online
2-1-11-3     PilarGarces Conejos & Patricia Bou-Franch, Relational work in e-service encounters: an intercultural, genre theoretical approach

2-1-12      Panel: Noriko Okada Onodera & Michi Shiina , Historical pragmatics: Socio-cultural motivations of language change [Part 1 of 2](Discussant: Andreas Jucker)
2-1-12-1     HirojiFukumoto, The Grammaticalization of Imperatives with a Pronoun in Early Modern English
2-1-12-2     YukoHigashiizumi, From referent to addressee honorific construction?: A case study of V-(a)se-te itadaku ‘V-causative humbly receive’ construction
2-1-12-3     YukikoMoriyama & Ryoko Suzuki, Establishment of addressee honorifics in Japanese: An analysis of faberi in light of language-external factors

 

 

10:00-10:30    Coffee break

 

 

10:30-12:00    Parallel sessions

 

2-2-01      Panel: Neal R. Norrick & Kerstin Fischer , Listener activities [Part 2 of 4]
2-2-01-1     AnnaFilipi & Anna Filipi, Yes, no and mm in very young children’s interactions with their parents
2-2-01-2     KerstinFischer, Feedback as a Means of Supporting Recipient Design
2-2-01-3     RodGardner, Use of Response Tokens in Indigenous Australian talk

2-2-02      Panel: Nicole Baumgarten, Svenja Kranich  & Inke Du Bois , Subjectivity in discourse [Part 2 of 4]
2-2-02-1     JulianeHouse, Subjectivity and connectivity in ELF discourse
2-2-02-2     JanusMortensen, Subjectivity in academic discourse – ELF vs Danish
2-2-02-3     Phuong DzungPho, Authorial stance in research articles from two disciplines

2-2-03        Lecture session : Media and political discourse 2
2-2-03-1      Elisabeth Le , Diversity of interactions within editorials and media identities: Le Monde from 1999 to 2001
2-2-03-2     DanielaLandert & Andreas H. Jucker, Talking back in mass media communication: The blending of public and private in letters to the editor and online commentaries
2-2-03-3     PiotrCap, Proximizing objects, proximizing values: towards an axiological contribution to the discourse of legitimization

2-2-04        Lecture session : Referring 2
2-2-04-1      Maria Luiza Cunha Lima , Indefinite Noun Phrases Interpretation and  Discourse Coherence
2-2-04-2     TakuoHayashi, Towards advancing “cognitive pragmatics”-an analysis of indirect talk from the perspective of reference point
2-2-04-3     MinnaNevala, Referential terms in group categorisation: A case study on Early and Late Modern English pamphlets

2-2-05    Lecture session: Pragmatics & visual media 2

2-2-05-1      Michael Alvarez-Pereyre , Using film as linguistic specimen: theoretical and practical issues
2-2-05-2     ElisaGhia, Context-conditioned variation in dubbed dialogue: The case of ‘criminal cant’
2-2-05-3     MaximilianeFrobenius, Beginning a monologue: the opening sequence of video blogs

2-2-06        Lecture session : Speech acts 2
2-2-06-1      Toshihiko Suzuki , A Corpus-study of the English Speech Acts of Thanking, Apologies, Requests and Offers: American University Students’ Lexicogrammatical and Discourse Strategies
2-2-06-2     GusztavDemeter, Situational and interactional contexts of apology construal in academic spoken English.  A corpus linguistic approach.
2-2-06-3     RoxanaSandu, A Study of Japanese Apologies and its Pedagogical Implications - A Speech Act Theory Approach-

2-2-07      Panel: Yuling Pan & Dániel Z. Kádár , Chinese discourse and interaction: Theory and practice [Part 2 of 4]
2-2-07-1     HaoSun, A shift in service representatives’ discursive patterns
2-2-07-2     YulingPan, What Are Chinese Respondents Responding? Discourse Analysis of Question-answer Sequence in Survey Interviews
2-2-07-3     AnnaChan & Yuling Pan, Analysis of Chinese Speakers’ Responses to Survey Interview Questions in Comparison to Other Language Speakers

2-2-08      Panel: SusanDanby & Jakob Cromdal , The interactional practices of children in institutional contexts [Part 2 of 2](Discussant: Ann Weatherall)
2-2-08-1     GeorginaHeydon, Asking the right questions: a presentation of findings relating to question forms used by police to interrogate children
2-2-08-2     MaryanneTheobald, “Well now I’m upset”: Making relevant a code of conduct

2-2-09      Panel: Haruko Minegishi Cook , Negotiating linguistic politeness in Japanese interaction: A critical examination of honorifics [Part 2 of 2]
2-2-09-1     Janet S.Shibamoto Smith, Honorifics, "Politeness," and Power in Japanese Political Debate
2-2-09-2     CynthiaDunn, Language socialization in the workplace: Japanese “business manners” training
2-2-09-3     AkikoKawasaki, Developmental Sociolinguistics: from a college student to a working woman in Japan

2-2-10      Panel: Luisa Martín Rojo & Rosina Márquez Reiter , Sociolinguistic and pragmatic aspects of institutional discourse: Service encounters in multilingual and multicultural contexts [Part 2 of 2](Discussant: Marisa Cordella)
2-2-10-1     Maria RosaGarrido Sardà, Eva Codó  & Maria Rosa Garrido Sardà, Migrants and global language resources: A study of bureaucratic and legal advice encounters
2-2-10-2     MelissaMoyer, The Management of Multilingualism in Public, Private and Non-Governmental Institutions

2-2-11      Panel: Sage Lambert Graham & Miriam Locher , (Im)politeness in computer-mediated communication (CMC) [Part 2 of 2]
2-2-11-1     YukikoNishimura, Impoliteness in Japanese BBS interactions: Observation from message exchanges in two discussion fora
2-2-11-2     TerezaSpilioti, Managing closings and face in text-messaging
2-2-11-3     TheodoraTseliga & Jo Angouri, "What the shit is this all about!!!????" A study of impoliteness strategies in two online fora

2-2-12      Panel: Noriko Okada Onodera & Michi Shiina , Historical pragmatics: Socio-cultural motivations of language change [Part 2 of 2](Discussant: Andreas Jucker)
2-2-12-1     MinakoNakayasu, Social interaction at work: Modals and (im)politeness in Shakespeare
2-2-12-2     NorikoOkada Onodera, Has "(be)’cause" become "cos" because of subjectification?
2-2-12-3     MichiShiina, Vocatives in Trial Texts: Early Modern English period

 

 

12:00-13:30 Lunch

 

 

13:30-15:00    Parallel sessions

 

2-3-01      Panel: Neal R. Norrick & Kerstin Fischer , Listener activities [Part 3 of 4]
2-3-01-1     MeredithMarra & Janet Holmes, Providing audible feedback in (workplace) interaction - are there ethnic differences?
2-3-01-2     YoshikoMatsumoto, To laugh or not to laugh:  Responding to humor and laughter in narratives of illness and death
2-3-01-3     ElizabethMeddeb & Patricia Frenz-Belkin, Listening Around the Computer

2-3-02      Panel: Nicole Baumgarten, Svenja Kranich  & Inke Du Bois , Subjectivity in discourse [Part 3 of 4]
2-3-02-1     HelenTebble, Subjectivity in the discourse of depressed and non-depressed patients
2-3-02-2     JimO'Driscoll & Anne-Marie Simon-Vandenbergen, Personalisation in extremist political discourse across cultures
2-3-02-3     BirtePawlack & Bernd Meyer, Subjectivity in interpreter-mediated discourse: mitigation
2-3-02-4     MohammadAmouzadeh, Subjective Modality in Parallel Texts: The Case of Persian and English

2-3-03        Lecture session : Pragmatics and technology
2-3-03-1      Michel Marcoccia & Nadia Gauducheau , The Interactional Patterns of Online Social Support
2-3-03-2     JuliaVelkovska & Valérie Beaudouin, “Understanding” and “misunderstandings” in human-machine telephone calls?
2-3-03-3     MichelWauthion, Disillusionment with the Collaborative Strategy in E-learning

2-3-04        Lecture session : Referring 3
2-3-04-1      Narita Mitsuko Izutsu & Katsunobu Izutsu , Inclusivity and non-solidarity: the use of first person plurals for second person honorifics in Ainu
2-3-04-2     Olga T.Yokoyama, Second person reference in 19 c. Russian peasant correspondence
2-3-04-3     TohruSeraku, Articulating unarticulated constituents

2-3-05    Lecture session: Speech act acquisition and learning 1

2-3-05-1      Cinzia Billa & Federica Ricci Garotti , Classroom interaction between institutionally-based vs interaction-based communication: a sequential survey through speech act/uptake game in a habermasian perspective
2-3-05-2     MarcAguert, Josie Bernicot  & Virginie Laval, Understanding Expressive Speech Acts: The Role of Prosody and Context in French-Speaking 5- to 9-Year-Olds
2-3-05-3     ElizabethFlores-Salgado, Developmental patterns of request and apologies

2-3-06        Lecture session : Speech acts 3
2-3-06-1      Hiba Qusay Abdul- Sattar, Salasiah Che Lah  & Raja Rozina Raja Suleiman , A Study on Strategies Used in Iraqi Arabic to Refuse Suggestions
2-3-06-2     KairiIgarashi, Rejection by "X my N"
2-3-06-3     PingPan, A cross-cultural comparison of requests in student-professor e-mail exchanges: A mixed-method approach

2-3-07      Panel: Yuling Pan & Dániel Z. Kádár , Chinese discourse and interaction: Theory and practice [Part 3 of 4]
2-3-07-1     WinnieCheng, The pragmatics and structure of Q &A sessions in professional discourses: Hong Kong Chinese professionals
2-3-07-2     DoreenWu & Ling Fan, Global Schemas and Local Variation in Chinese Broadcast Talk
2-3-07-3     YueguoGu, Multimodal text data-mining: Modeling Chinese power relations in situated discourse

2-3-08      Panel: Noriko Okamoto, Kori Okuizumi, Shinji Sato, Yuri Kumagai, Yuki Fukai  & Masami Kadokura , Multimodal literacy in Japanese: Theory, practice, and application to language education
2-3-08-1     NorikoOkamoto, Noriko Okamoto, Kaori Okuizumi  & Masami Kadokura, Reading Multimodal Modes of Meaning -Analysis of Japanese Mass Media -
2-3-08-2     YuriKumagai, Japanese orthographies as linguistic and visual meaning representations: Students'' investigation
2-3-08-3     ShinjiSato & Miyuki Fukai, Fostering multimodal literacy: Japanese language learners’ podcast project

2-3-09     Panel:   Sachiko Kitazume , Do the Japanese have a sense of humor?
2-3-09-1     SachikoKitazume, A parody in the Scrolls of Frolicking Animals called "Chojyu-giga"
2-3-09-2     GohAbe, The Japanese sense  of humor from a historical perspective
2-3-09-3     JessicaMilner Davis, A Western perspective on humour in Japan
2-3-09-4     MakikoTakekuro, Humor in the use of Japanese honorifics

2-3-10        Lecture session : Pragmatic acquisition
2-3-10-1      Kyung Joo Yoon , Culture-specific Child Raring Practice as a Window into Core Cultural Values
2-3-10-2     StephanieChaminaud, Marc Aguert, Virginie Laval  & Josie Bernicot, Nonliteral language forms  in children and adolescents: what metapragmatic knowledge?

2-3-11      Panel: Michael Haugh & Derek Bousfield , Im/politeness across Englishes [Part 1 of 2]
2-3-11-1     AnneBarron & Klaus P. Schneider, Cultural scripts and politic behaviour across varieties of English
2-3-11-2     DerekBousfield & Michael Haugh, Jocular face-threatening amongst Australian and British speakers of English
2-3-11-3     OliverHambling-Jones, Andrew John Merrison  & Oliver Hambling-Jones, The Role of Im/politeness in Accelerating Social Intimacy: An Analysis of UK-based Pick-Up Artist (PUA) Interactions

2-3-12      Panel: Daniel Perrin, Ellen Van Praet  & Tom Van Hout , Collaborative news writing: A discursive perspective on news production [Part 1 of 2]
2-3-12-1     DanielPerrin, “Let the pictures do the talking” – Investigating TV journalists’ collaborative text production strategies
2-3-12-2     TomVan Hout & Ellen Van Praet, Buy or sell? The role of consumption and authorship in financial news writing
2-3-12-3     EllenVan Praet & Tom Van Hout, Competence on display: negotiating status during editorial meetings

 

 

15:00-15:30    Coffee break

 

 

15:30-17:00    Parallel sessions

 

2-4-01      Panel: Neal R. Norrick & Kerstin Fischer , Listener activities [Part 4 of 4]
2-4-01-1     AngelaChan & S. Schnurr, When laughter isn’t funny. Responding to teasing and self-denigrating humour at work
2-4-01-2     Neal R.Norrick, Trajectories of listening practices: the responses responses elicit
2-4-01-3     Klaus P.Schneider, "Exactly, yes, that's right": Sequential features of listener activities in small talk

2-4-02      Panel: Nicole Baumgarten, Svenja Kranich  & Inke Du Bois , Subjectivity in discourse [Part 4 of 4]
2-4-02-1     SusannaKarlsson & Kerry  Mullan, Subjectivity in Contrast: a cross-linguistic comparison of “I think” and its equivalents across Germanic and Romance languages.
2-4-02-2     AntoineAufray, Between modality and reported speech: constructions in ich sag x / da hab ich gesagt x in spoken german
2-4-02-3     ClaudiaScharioth & Konstanze Jungbluth, Self-presentation and adaptation in institutional discourse. The use of linguistic "start off-signals" in German and French introductory rounds of university seminars
2-4-02-4     NadineRentel, Subjectivity in academic discourse: A cross-linguistic comparison of the author''s presence in French, Italian and German research articles in linguistics

2-4-03        Lecture session : Pragmatics, science, music, and dance
2-4-03-1      Inger Mey , Understanding Bacteria through Performance
2-4-03-1     KatharineParton, The contextualisation of conductor gesture
2-4-03-3     MythiliAnoop & Milind Malshe, Performance as “Conversation” and “Dialogue”: Pragmatic Perspectives in Classical Indian Dance Traditions

2-4-04        Lecture session : Deixis 1
2-4-04-1      Nana Aba Appiah Amfo, Thorstein Fretheim  & Ildikó Vaskó , Deictic "here" is no pure indexical
2-4-04-2     JanezJustin & Maja Zupancic, Plato''s protopragmatics of indexicality
2-4-04-3     Shelley Ching-yuHsieh & Christin Yun-ting Chen, Speaking of ‘I’: First person pronoun in Mandarin Chinese

2-4-05    Lecture session : Speech act acquisition and learning 2

2-4-05-1      Chen Pin Liu , Apologizing in English by Taiwanese University Students
2-4-05-2     SiriruckThijittang & Thao Lê, Interlanguage Pragmatics: Speech act of apology in English of Thai Learners
2-4-05-3     YaseminAksoyalp, An Investigation into the Pragmatic transfer in the realisation of refusal strategies used by Turkish EFL learners

2-4-06        Lecture session : Speech acts 4
2-4-06-1      Cecilia Varcasia , Request-response sequences in Service Encounters
2-4-06-2     HelenWoodfield, What lies beneath?: verbal report in research on interlanguage requests in English

2-4-07      Panel: Yuling Pan & Dániel Z. Kádár , Chinese discourse and interaction: Theory and practice [Part 4 of 4]
2-4-07-1     Wei-LinChang & Michael Haugh, Face in Taiwanese business interactions: from emic concepts to emic practices
2-4-07-2     Dániel ZoltánKádár, Literary Politeness and Group Identity Formation in Historical Chinese Written Discourse

2-4-08      Panel: Britt Erman, Annika Denke, Lars Fant, Fanny Forsberg  & Margareta Lewis , Formulaic language and idiomaticity in high-level L2 production
2-4-08-1     BrittErman, Britt Erman, Fanny Forsberg, Lars Fant, Annika Denke  & Margareta Lewis, Formulaic language, communicative proficiency and socio-cultural adaptation in three target languages
2-4-08-2     DavidWood, Effects of Focused Instruction of Formulaic Sequences on Fluent Expression in Second Language Narratives

2-4-09      Panel: Yasumi Murata & Sanae Tsuda , Rapport development strategies in Japanese conversation: Why does intercultural communication succeed or fail? [Part 1 of 2]
2-4-09-1     YasumiMurata, Gaze and rapport building in Japanese interaction
2-4-09-2     MamiOtani & Yuko Iwata, Topic choice and topic management in Japanese and American English
2-4-09-3     YokoOtsuka, Overview of ways of expressing politeness and back-channeling in Japanese

2-4-10      Panel: Ray Wilkinson , Interactional approaches to communication disorders
2-4-10-1     ElizabethArmstrong, Being aphasic and asserting opinions: Challenges and strengths in conversations
2-4-10-2     JohnRae, Penny Stribling  & Aleksandar Aksentijevic, Autistic children’s production of melodic vocalizations in interaction
2-4-10-3     AlisonFerguson & Ashlee Harper, ''Speaking for'' individuals with aphasia in multiparty interactions
2-4-10-4     RayWilkinson, Formulating actions and events with limited linguistic resources: Direct reported speech and enactment in agrammatic aphasic talk

2-4-11      Panel: MichaelHaugh & Derek Bousfield , Im/politeness across Englishes [Part 2 of 2]
2-4-11-1     AndrewMerrison, Bethan L. Davies  & Michael Haugh, Do us a Favour, Doc?: Comparing E-mail Requests from Students in Higher Education in Britain and Australia
2-4-11-2     JonathonReinhardt, Politeness, Power, and Directives in Academic Discourse: Corpus-based Insights from Learner English
2-4-11-3     SophiaWaters, “It’s rude to VP”: The cultural semantics of rudeness

2-4-12      Panel: Daniel Perrin, Ellen Van Praet  & Tom Van Hout , Collaborative news writing: A discursive perspective on news production [Part 2 of 2]
2-4-12-1     MarcelBurger, Dealing with conflicting journalistic styles to achieve texts:oral negotiation of written media discourse
2-4-12-2     InésOlza, The role of metaphor in news production: Political metaphors in "preformulated" media texts
2-4-12-3     JasperVandenberghe, New Spanish conquistadores? Newspaper articles and press releases on Spanish foreign investments in Argentina.

 

 

17:00-17:15    Short break

 

 

17:15-18:45    Parallel sessions

 

2-5-01        Lecture session : Political discourse
2-5-01-1      jaime gelabert , HIS MASTER’S VOICE: DISCURSIVE FUNCTIONS OF PERSONAL PRONOUN ‘YO’ (I) IN CONTEMPORARY SPANISH POLITICAL DISCOURSE
2-5-01-2     TeodoraPopescu, Affect-driven computer mediated communication in the Romanian political blogosphere
2-5-01-3     ParameswaryRasiah & Marie-Eve Ritz, Questionable questions in Question Time

2-5-02      Panel: Kristian Mortensen , Turns, TCUs and embodied social action
2-5-02-1     AnneMeyer & Kristian Mortensen, Mutual gaze and adjacency pair: an interactional necessity?
2-5-02-3     Anne-SylvieHorlacher & Elwys De Stefani, Multimodally organized turn beginnings: visual appositionals in the so-called “left dislocated” turn format
2-5-02-3     GudrunZiegler, Embodied action for designing "turns-at-talk" in a joint reading activity

2-5-03        Lecture session : Implicit meaning
2-5-03-1      Kamila Debowska , Abductive methodology and abductive reasoning in the study of reasonableness of naturally occurring discussions
2-5-03-2     GlauciaMuniz Proença Lara, Examining and applying the notion of presupposition in Argumentative Semantics
2-5-03-3     HussainAl-sharoufi & Munir Mahmood, Using a Near Statistical Dependency Approach in Testing Non-Native Speakers’ Ability in Recuperating English Conversational Implicatures

2-5-04        Lecture session : Deixis 2
2-5-04-1      Irene Fonte & Rodney Williamson , Person deixis in conversation: a co-constructionist view
2-5-04-2     Mihai DanielFrumuselu, Deixis marking in language corpora using the C programming language
2-5-04-3     JoshuaNash, Norfolk Island, Placenames and Space

2-5-05    Lecture session: Speech act acquisition and learning 3

2-5-05-1      Ha Do , The acquisition of disagreements in an ELF context
2-5-05-2     Chung WaLaw, The use of request strategies in Cantonese school aged children
2-5-05-3     Cheung-Shing SamLeung & Lornita Wong, Use of request strategies in Cantonese-speaking  preschool chidlren

2-5-06        Lecture session : Time
2-5-06-1      Anna Gladkova , The semantics and pragmatics of ‘time’ in Russian
2-5-06-2    ThanhNgo & Thanh Do-Hurinville, Interpretation of temporality in Vietnamese narrative texts: linguistic and pragmatic factors
2-5-06-3     ChristopheParisse, Martine Sekali  & Aliyah Morgenstern, Initial uses and development of future verb tenses in French-speaking children

2-5-07      Panel: Yasuko Kanda, Jun Ohashi  & Chie Yamane , The Olympics and nationalism through the media: A cross-cultural perspective
2-5-07-1     YasukoKanda, Yasuko Kanda  & Jun Ohashi, Olympic victories and defeats: recurrent speech repertoire in blogs in Japanese and Australia media
2-5-07-2     LewisMayo, Solidarity Effects and National Self-image in Chinese Language Discourse about the Beijing Olympics
2-5-07-3     SachikoTakagi, Representations of nationalism in newspaper articles
2-5-07-4     ChieYamane-Yoshinaga, Interview Discourse and National Sports

2-5-08      Panel: Agnes Bolonyai & Rakesh Bhatt , Articulating belonging: Migrant identity discourses in transnational and trans-regional contexts
2-5-08-1     RakeshBhatt, Longing, Belonging, and Discontent: Kashmiri Language in Diaspora
2-5-08-2     AgnesBolonyai, The migrant’s tale:   Representations of self and other in the narrative quest for belonging
2-5-08-3     EmilyFarrell, “It’s more a matter of the way you feel towards a place that you used to call home”: Identity and belonging in transnational spaces

2-5-09      Panel: Yasumi Murata & Sanae Tsuda , Rapport development strategies in Japanese conversation: Why does intercultural communication succeed or fail? [Part 2 of 2]
2-5-09-1     YukaShigemitsu, A comparative study of Sequence patterns in conversation: English and Japanese
2-5-09-2     SanaeTsuda, Interpersonal Functions of desu/masu and ne/yo in Japanese Conversations

2-5-10      Panel: Olga Zayts & M. Agnes Kang , Language, medicine and culture: Researching healthcare discourse in multilingual and multicultural contexts
2-5-10-1     SusanBridges, Coman McGrath  & Cynthia Yiu, Multilingual clinical interactions in Dentistry – a microanalysis
2-5-10-2     MichieKawashima, Advice giving in Japanese midwifery practices: cultural reflections on its formulation and organization
2-5-10-3     AnneStorey, Tse Lai Kun  & Chan Lap Ki, Discourse of clinical training
2-5-10-4     OlgaZayts & Virginia Y. Wake, Patient’s direct questions and maintaining nondirectiveness of genetic counseling: Evidence from prenatal genetic counseling sessions in Hong Kong

2-5-11      Panel: Keiko Ikeda & Sungbae Ko , "Tasks-as-process" in second/foreign language classrooms
2-5-11-1     EricHauser, How to Be a Japanese Female Engineering Student in an English Discussion
2-5-11-2     KeikoIkeda & Erica Zimmerman, Conversation analysis of “Prochievement-Based” Communication Task: A case of Japanese as a foreign language learners
2-5-11-3     SungbaeKo, Analysing peer interactive tasks in Korean language classrooms: A conversation analysis perspective
2-5-11-4     Yong-YaePark, Dealing with Disagreements and Rejections in EFL Writing Tutorial Discourse

2-5-12      Panel: Luke Moissinac & Michael Bamberg , Positioning in the pragmatics of linguistic social interaction: The state of the art
2-5-12-1     BronwynDavies, Positioning the other as bully
2-5-12-2     ArnulfDeppermann, Positioning in interaction: (How) Can we relate micro to macro?
2-5-12-3     ThomasDuus Henriksen & Rom Harré, Creating monumental positions as master narratives
2-5-12-4     LukeMoissinac & Michael Bamberg, Positioning in the Construction of Identities through ''Small'' Stories in Social Interaction

 

 

 

WEDNESDAY, 15 July 2009

 

8:00     Conference registration opens

 

 

8:30-10:00      Plenaries

                                Chair: Sotaro Kita

 

3-1      Katarzyna M. Jaszczolt , Speaking about time: Contextual inferences and pragmatic defaults
3-1     YasuhiroKatagiri, Finding parameters in interaction  -- A method in emancipatory pragmatics

 

 

10:00-10:30    Coffee break

 

 

10:30-12:00    Parallel sessions

 

3-2-01        Lecture session : Language policies
3-2-01-1      Sylvie Lamoureux , Language policy, language planning  & the politics of language  in higher education access policy in Ontario (Canada)
3-2-01-2     ZohraSaad-Kherief, Language Policy, Conflicts, and Rights in Post Colonial Algeria
3-2-01-3     Yuen Fan LornitaWong & Cheung Shing Leung, Culture and Chinese literacy development of ethnic minority primary school children in Hong Kong

3-2-02        Lecture session: Language change
3-2-02-1      Nami Arimitsu , On Semantic Change from Quantity to Action-Inhibitive Attitudes
3-2-02-2     Paul V.Kroskrity, Ethnopragmatic and Ideological Factors in the Grammaticalization of Arizona Tewa Negation
3-2-02-3     CelesteRodriguez Louro & Chad Howe, Perfect potential: Semantic change in narrative contexts across Spanish

3-2-03        Lecture session : Japanese pragmatics
3-2-03-1      Nina Yoshida , An analysis of deontic KOTO constructions in Japanese
3-2-03-2     NeridaJarkey, Japanese Honorific Language in a Taishô Women’s Magazine: Creating the Identity of the Housewife
3-2-03-3     EmiMorita, Conversational functions and derived various interpretations of the Japanese particle yo

3-2-04        Lecture session : The dynamics of loss and innovation
3-2-04-1      Gerd Jendraschek , Obsolescence, continuity, and innovation in Iatmul: Insights from an intermediate language in Papua New Guinea
3-2-04-2     CecileVigouroux & Salikoko S. Mufwene, Language Endangerment and Loss: Perspectives from Dynamics of Multilingual Interactions
3-2-04-3     MariaTarantino, Physical context and human ingenium: pragmatic universals in conceptual and semantic patterns of cross-dialect communities

3-2-05        Lecture session : Child language
3-2-05-1      Megumi Kawate-Mierzejewska , In what way do age factors influence on the development of pragmatic competence?
3-2-05-2     AliyahMorgenstern, Sekali Martine  & Parisse Christophe, From morpho-syntactic ‘errors’ to the emergence of linguistic patterns in the acquisition of French: a syntax/pragmatics interface case study of transitory sub-systems between one and three.
3-2-05-3     StefanoRezzonico, Geneviève de Weck, Anne Salazar Orvig, Cristina Corlateanu, Christine da Silva, Séverine Gendre  & Juliane Ingold, Maternal scaffolding strategies in three familiar activities: comparison of SLI and normally developing children dyads

3-2-06        Lecture session: Language teaching
3-2-06-1      Nicholas Jungheim, Sayoko Yamashita  & Megumi Kawate-Mierzejewska , Teaching language learners to be rude: An examination of what learners need to know about rudeness
3-2-06-2     SayokoYamashita, Co-construction of Adult Learners in a Beginning Japanese Language Classroom
3-2-06-3     Anne-MarieBarraja-Rohan, Tracking Interactional Development in an Advanced Second Language Learner of English

3-2-07        Lecture session : Interactivity
3-2-07-1      Tomoko Hoogenboom , Building participation structures with repetition: Differences between bilingual and monolingual Japanese children
3-2-07-2     YokoSasagawa, The Adjustment of the Sharing of Meaning through the Process of Repairing in Inter-cultural Communication
3-2-07-3     HelenCaple, Sharing ‘uncommon’ ground: how news reporting construes readership through word-image play

3-2-08        Lecture session : Cooperation
3-2-08-1      Levisen Carsten , The Danish value tryghed “peace of mind”:  Pragmatic manifestations and cultural motivations
3-2-08-2     ElisabetCedersund & Anna Olaison, Communicative practices in care management: Old age as an argument in home care assessments
3-2-08-3     PauloCortes Gago, Assessments, family mediation and interaction

3-2-09        Lecture session : Context
3-2-09-1      Cemal Cakir , Foreign language teaching professionals’ understanding of context: is it the fifth element transportable?
3-2-09-2     SusanaOlmos, The relevance of context in the definition of contrast encoded in but
3-2-09-3     VirginiaWake, When the Guiding Nondirectivenss Principle Becomes Risky

3-2-10        Lecture session : Intercultural communication
3-2-10-1      John Hajek, M. Clyne, L. Kretzenbacher, C. Norrby  & J. Warren , Meet and greet – address and introductions in intercultural communication at international conferences
3-2-10-2     TonyLiddicoat, Metapragmatic awareness and mediating between cultures in the context of language learning
3-2-10-3     SylviaWaechter & Margit Krause-Ono, “Ability or luck?” – Analysis of Japanese and German soccer players'' verbal expressions

3-2-11        Lecture session : Language and culture
3-2-11-1      Jin-ok Hong , Individual Frame and Confucian Script for a Culture-specific Communication Framework
3-2-11-2     HandeUysal & Kadriye Dilek Akpinar, Cultural differences in the perception of indirectness in scientific academic discourse
3-2-11-3     AlinaBestard Revilla, El enfoque sociocultural en el estudio de la cortesía verbal del habla coloquial de Santiago de Cuba.

3-2-12        Lecture session : Representation
3-2-12-1      Li Fu & Xiaohui Han , A bridge between the listeners'' mental representations and the utterances
3-2-12-2     MikhailKissine, The pragmatics of epistemic modality
3-2-12-3    BengtNordberg, A case of double definite qualifiers in spoken Swedish: an interactional approach

 

 

12:00-13:00    IPrA General Assembly

 

 

 

THURSDAY, 16 July 2009

 

8:00     Conference registration opens

 

 

8:30-10:00      Parallel sessions

 

4-1-01      Panel: MichaelEwing & Ritva Laury , Clause combining in discourse: the interplay between structure and pragmatics [Part 1 of 4]
4-1-01-1     MichaelEwing, Conditionals and the marking of complex framing constructions in Javanese conversation
4-1-01-2     RobertEnglebretson, Ellipsis and ''Subordination'' in Colloquial Indonesian Conversation: A Corpus-Based Study
4-1-01-3     Marja-LiisaHelasvuo & Ritva Laury, Relative clause structures in context

4-1-02      Panel: Johanna Rendle-Short, Rod Gardner  & Ilana Mushin , Talk-in-interaction in (Australian) indigenous communities [Part 1 of 3]
4-1-02-1     JoeBlythe, The Preference for Association in Murriny Patha Talk-in-Interaction
4-1-02-2     SophieNicholls, Recognitional reference forms in Roper River Kriol: People and places
4-1-02-3     SarahCutfield, Making and monitoring demonstrative deixis in Dalabon interactions

4-1-04        Lecture session : Politeness 1
4-1-04-1      Lucien Brown , “I don’t want to be disrespectful”: Ideology regarding politeness and the use of Korean speech styles by second language speakers
4-1-04-2     NorikoInagaki, Beyond the East-West divide: B &L’s politeness theories revisited
4-1-04-3     YasukoObana, Politeness strategies in Japanese honorifics - Directness can be polite.

4-1-05        Lecture session : Metaphor 1
4-1-05-1      Bento Carlos Dias da Silva & Ana Eliza Barbosa de Oliveira , Computational treatment of metaphor use
4-1-05-2     JuanLi, "Do you understand yourself?" - A Cross-Cultural Approach to Cognitive Metaphors
4-1-05-3     MianHuang, Why metaphor is possible?

4-1-06        Lecture session : Learning and teaching 1
4-1-06-1      Jan Berenst , Instruction in Third Position
4-1-06-2     SigneErnist & Meeri Hellstén, The accomplishment of learning/teaching practices in foreign language classrooms in New South Wales
4-1-06-3     JuliaHüttner, Capturing oral language proficiency: on the use of the label ‘fluent’ as a descriptor for interactions

4-1-07      Panel: MartinLuginbühl & Stefan Hauser , Contrastive media analysis – approaches to linguistic and cultural aspects of text types [Part 1 of 4]
4-1-07-1     StefanHauser, On the culture-boundness of text types – a contrastive study of the sports coverage in the daily press
4-1-07-2     MartinLuginbühl, The cultural meaning of TV news texts
4-1-07-3     Eva L.Wyss, Acting on Nation or Trans-Nation? Comparing European and Global TV Commercials and their National and Transnational Corporate Identity Strategies.

4-1-08      Panel: Ingrid Piller & Kimie Takahashi , Language learning, multilingualism and social inclusion [Part 1 of 4]
4-1-08-1     HuameiHan, Accumulating Linguistic and Socio-Economic Capital on the Margin
4-1-08-2     ChristinaHiggins & Kim Stoker, Language learning as a site for belonging: Korean adoptee-returnees'' use of Korean as a heritage language
4-1-08-3     MeredithIzon, Language, identity and social inclusion: a linguistic ethnography of African youth settlement in Tasmania

4-1-09      Panel: Marie J.Myers , Looking for the common thread in connected sub-cultures [Part 1 of 2]
4-1-09-1     Marie J.Myers, Understanding language development in "professionalization"
4-1-09-2     LutBaten, Language Portfolios in Business English
4-1-09-3     JordanaGarbati, Issues in teaching French as a second language

4-1-10      Panel; Jan-OlaÖstman & Terhi Ainiala , Socio-onomastics as pragmatics [Part 1 of 2](Discussant: Elwys de Stefani)
4-1-10-1     TerhiAiniala & Hanna Lappalainen, Variability in the use of names for Helsinki
4-1-10-2     MariaVidberg, Orienting oneself as a Swedish speaker in Helsinki
4-1-10-3     JarnoRaukko, Exonyms as socio-pragmatic indicators of  contact, politics, and exotism

4-1-11      Panel: Scott Saft & Sachiko Ide , Emancipatory pragmatics: The search for cultural parameters in interactional discourse [Part 1 of 4]
4-1-11-1     SongthamaIntachakra, Khwa:m kre:ngjai as a principle of self-restraint and other-accommodation in Thai politeness
4-1-11-2     WilliamBeeman, Getting the lower hand: the advantagious strategies of humility in interaction
4-1-11-3     KeikoAbe, A Study of Persuasion Strategies in U.S. and Japanese Advice Giving Discourse

4-1-12      Panel: AnitaFetzer & Etsuko Oishi , Context and contexts: parts meet whole? [Part 1 of 4](Discussant: Kerstin Fischer)
4-1-12-1     AmaliaMoser & Eleni Panaretou, Why a mother’s rule is not a law
4-1-12-2     VirginiaHussin, A Pharmacy Education Context
4-1-12-3     LuisaGranato de Grasso, Coherence and context in casual conversation.

 

 

10:00-10:30    Coffee break

 

 

10:30-12:00    Parallel sessions

 

4-2-01      Panel: Michael Ewing & Ritva Laury , Clause combining in discourse: the interplay between structure and pragmatics [Part 2 of 4]
4-2-01-1     StéphaneJullien, French presentational ya-cleft in adult-adult and adult-child interactions
4-2-01-2     Sandra A.Thompson & Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen, Conditionality and clause combining as a resource for complaining and criticizing
4-2-01-3     CatherineTravis & Timothy Jowan Curnow, Clause-combining in Spanish cleft constructions

4-2-02      Panel: JohannaRendle-Short, Rod Gardner  & Ilana Mushin , Talk-in-interaction in (Australian) indigenous communities [Part 2 of 3]
4-2-02-1     RodGardner, Question and answer sequences in Indigenous Australian talk
4-2-02-2     GertieHoymann, Questions and Responses in
ǂ Ākhoe Hai ǀǀ om
4-2-02-3      Johanna Rendle-Short , Children understanding talk-in-interaction in the Australian Aboriginal community of Yakanarra

4-2-03        Lecture session : Aspects of socialization
4-2-03-1      Miroslawa Kaczmarek , ethics or etiquette?
4-2-03-2     KumikoMurata, Housewives and housework: hidden assumptions of the fixed gender roles in the Japanese print media
4-2-03-3     MatthewBurdelski, Socializing Politeness

4-2-04        Lecture session : Politeness 2
4-2-04-1      Naomi Ogi , Involvement and speaker’s attitude: Japanese interactive markers
4-2-04-2     HaleIsik-Guler, Using cultural keywords to trace bases of (im)politeness evaluations
4-2-04-3     SvenjaKranich, Epistemic modality between marker of true uncertainty and politeness strategy. Evidence from English and German popular scientific writing.

4-2-05        Lecture session : Metaphor 2
4-2-05-1      Reiko Hayashi , Women, radish, and white things: dynamics of discourse metaphor co-constructed in conversation
4-2-05-2     Uwe KjærNissen, “A louse crossed my liver” – A cross-linguistic study of animal-in-body- metaphors

4-2-06        Lecture session : Learning and teaching 2
4-2-06-1      Chiung-Wen Chang & Chen-Ying Li , Exploring Native and Non-Native English Teachers'' Beliefs about English Teaching in Preschools
4-2-06-2     KaoriDoi, L2 acquisition of non-native speakers of Japanese focusing on syntactic and pragmatic elements.
4-2-06-3     CynthiaLee, Interlanguage pragmatic comprehension: A cross-sectional study on young Cantonese learners of English

4-2-07      Panel: Martin Luginbühl & Stefan Hauser , Contrastive media analysis – approaches to linguistic and cultural aspects of text types [Part 2 of 4]
4-2-07-1     Eva MarthaEckkrammer, Contrastive insight on the evolution of medical self-counselling genres: a diachronic, pragmatic approach
4-2-07-2     BerndSpillner, Linguistic, intercultural and semiotic contrasts of obituaries
4-2-07-3     MariaLastovetskaya, Blended metaphor as a core pragmatics means in the advertising discourse

4-2-08      Panel: IngridPiller & Kimie Takahashi , Language learning, multilingualism and social inclusion [Part 2 of 4]
4-2-08-1     RyukoKubota, Consumption and Business Interest of Learning a Foreign Language as Serious Leisure
4-2-08-2     LoyLising, In the quest for greener pastures: Converting linguistic capital into economic capital
4-2-08-3     HaruoOrito & Yukinori Watanabe, The ‘Visit Japan’ Campaign: Language, ethnicity and social inclusion among Korean tourism workers

4-2-09      Panel: Marie J.Myers , Looking for the common thread in connected sub-cultures [Part 2 of 2]
4-2-09-1     NicolaMittelsten Scheid, Levels of metacognitive knowledge on the notion of argument
4-2-09-2     YuanlinZhao, Classroom communication and the teaching of Chinese in Canada:  a case study

4-2-10      Panel: Jan-OlaÖstman & Terhi Ainiala , Socio-onomastics as pragmatics [Part 2 of 2](Discussant: Elwys de Stefani)
4-2-10-1     Aud-KirstiPedersen, Language contact and the transmission of toponyms
4-2-10-2     GunterSenft, Landscape terms and place names in the Trobriand Islands – the Kaile’una subset
4-2-10-3     LeilaMattfolk, Attitudes towards globalized commercial names
4-2-10-4     EmiliaAldrin, Naming children as an act of social identity

4-2-11      Panel: Scott Saft & Sachiko Ide , Emancipatory pragmatics: The search for cultural parameters in interactional discourse [Part 2 of 4]
4-2-11-1     Myung-HeeKim & Yoko Fujii, A Cross-Linguistic Study of Negotiating Interaction: A Comparison of Story Co-Construction by Korean, Japanese, and American Pairs
4-2-11-2     KuniyoshiKataoka, Emancipatory Pragmatics: The Search for Cultural Parameters in Interactional Discourse
4-2-11-3     Mayouf AliMayouf & Yasuhiro Katagiri, Silence is a sign of agreement: A study of consensus building behaviors in Arabic task-oriented dialogues

4-2-12      Panel: Anita Fetzer & Etsuko Oishi , Context and contexts: parts meet whole? [Part 2 of 4](Discussant: Kerstin Fischer)
4-2-12-1     LawrenceBerlin, Fighting Words: Is the Tongue Mightier than the Sword?
4-2-12-2     AlejandroParini, Alejandro Parini  & Luisa Granato, Context and talk in confrontational discourses
4-2-12-3     AnnetteBecker, Appraisal in context

 

 

12:00-13:30    Lunch

 

 

13:30-15:00    Parallel sessions

 

4-3-01      Panel: MichaelEwing & Ritva Laury , Clause combining in discourse: the interplay between structure and pragmatics [Part 3 of 4]
4-3-01-1     AnnaMargetts, Clause combining and serialization in an Oceanic Language of Papua New Guinea
4-3-01-2     ToshihideNakayama, Grammaticization and pragmatic motivations in clause combining: a case study in Nuuchahnulth
4-3-01-3     RyokoSuzuki, Interactional profile of causal kara-clause in Japanese conversation: Because ‘main’ clause is there or is not there

4-3-02      Panel: JohannaRendle-Short, Rod Gardner  & Ilana Mushin , Talk-in-interaction in (Australian) indigenous communities [Part 3 of 3]
4-3-02-1     IlanaMushin, Conversational code-mixing in Garrwa talk-in-interaction
4-3-02-2     MichaelWalsh, Some neo-Gricean maxims for Aboriginal Australia
4-3-02-3     IanMalcolm, The Representation of Interaction in Aboriginal Oral Narratives

4-3-03     Panel: Sonia Vandepitte , Contextual analyses in translation studies
4-3-03-1     Ya-meiChen, On context and news translation from the perspective of reception aesthetics
4-3-03-2     BartDefrancq, Translating insults: parameters and cross-genre bias
4-3-03-3     JulianeHouse, Meaning-making in translation: re-contextualization and the Third Space phenomenon
4-3-03-4     SieglindePommer, Contextual Analysis in Legal Translation

4-3-04        Lecture session : Politeness 3
4-3-04-1      Marlyna Maros, Mohammad Fadzeli Jaafar  & Maslida Yusof , Politeness strategies, cultural values, and sociopragmatic competence in greetings among Malaysian youths
4-3-04-2     SachikoShudo & Yasunari Harada, Presupposition manipulation as a politeness strategy: politeness through ostensive inferential communication
4-3-04-3     NorikoTanaka, Politeness Strategies Used to Manage Problematic Discourse: roles and linguistic choices in telephone conversation

4-3-05        Lecture session : Metaphor 3
4-3-05-1      Meizhen Liao , Metaphors we organize our text by
4-3-05-2     StefaniePeeters, A textual and contextual analysis of media metaphors: the case of the French suburban crisis coverage
4-3-05-3     ToshikoYamaguchi, Is Time derived from Space? Three arguments from Japanese temporal expressions

4-3-06        Lecture session : Learning and teaching 3
4-3-06-1      Kazumi Namiki , Instructed learning of Japanese requests in a foreign language setting
4-3-06-2     CarolRinnert, Self-reflective instructional activities to develop L2 learners’ pragmatic development
4-3-06-3     JunkoTanaka, The relationship among L2 English article use, pragmatic environments, and L2 proficiency.

4-3-07      Panel: Martin Luginbühl & Stefan Hauser , Contrastive media analysis – approaches to linguistic and cultural aspects of text types [Part 3 of 4]
4-3-07-1     RoelCoesemans, Categorization and representation in international flows of meaning
4-3-07-2     LiesbethMichiels, A linguistic pragmatic study of evidentiality and epistemic modality in international newspaper reporting: the case of war in North Kivu
4-3-07-3     StephenMoore, Global and local representations of Cambodia

4-3-08      Panel: Ingrid Piller & Kimie Takahashi , Language learning, multilingualism and social inclusion [Part 3 of 4]
4-3-08-1     EmiOtsuji, Metrolingualism, language ideologies and social inclusion: Casual conversations in the multilingual workplace
4-3-08-2     Joseph Sung-YulPark, The promise of English: Linguistic capital and the job market in South Korea
4-3-08-3     KimieTakahashi, Gender, desire and linguistic capital in international tourism

4-3-09      Panel: SigridNorris , Multimodal discourse analysis: Investigating rhythms in identity construction [Part 1 of 2]
4-3-09-1     SigridNorris, The ebb and flow of identity rhythms:  A glance at inner time
4-3-09-2     IrmengardWohlfahrt, Belonging and Identities: Elderly immigrants in New Zealand
4-3-09-3     GudrunFrommherz, Celebrating identity – the semiotics of Aipan rituals

4-3-10      Panel: CharlesColeman , Violating the script [Part 1 of 2]
4-3-10-1     Cheryl NWilliams, Charles Coleman, Jon Yasin  & Halima Toure, "How Dare Barak Obama and Hilary Clinton Seek the Democratic Nomination at the Same Time?"
4-3-10-2     Jon A.Yasin, If You're White, You're Right, but If You're Black, Get Back
4-3-10-3     HalimaTouré, Barack Obama’s Speech on Race

4-3-11      Panel: ScottSaft & Sachiko Ide , Emancipatory pragmatics: The search for cultural parameters in interactional discourse [Part 3 of 4]
4-3-11-1     SavitriGadavanij-, “You see ? I am a woman!”: An analysis of ideological clash in the discourse of Thai female politicians
4-3-11-2     JasonCabral, Commands and cultural perception of behavior in Hawaiian
4-3-11-3     ScottSaft, Pronouns, self, and interaction in Hawaiian, Japanese, and English
4-3-11-4     KaoruHorie, The interactional origin of nominal-oriented predicate structure in Japanese: A comparative perspective

4-3-12      Panel: AnitaFetzer & Etsuko Oishi , Context and contexts: parts meet whole? [Part 3 of 4](Discussant: Katarzyna Jaszczolt)
4-3-12-1     KonstanzeJungbluth, This? No, that! Constructing Shared Contexts in the Dyad of Conversation
4-3-12-2     AnitaFetzer, “Here is the difference, here is the passion, here is the chance to be part of great change.” Strategic context importation in political discourse.
4-3-12-3     LeilaBehrens, Focus as an interactional device: new aspects of the Hungarian focus
4-3-12-4     Umit DenizTuran & Deniz Zeyrek, Corrective and Concessive Connectives in Turkish discourse context

 

 

15:00-17:15    Coffee break & POSTER SESSION

 

4-4      Fabienne Baider , Studying Language on Forums and Digging into the ‘Archeology’ of Opinions
4-4     AndrewBarke, Utilisation and Manipulation of Honorifics in the Construction of Social Identities in Japanese Television Drama
4-4     ScottBarnes, Storytelling after acquired brain injury: A conversation-analytic approach
4-4     DomenicBerducci, From infant reacting to understanding: Infant/caregiver interaction
4-4     Erich A.Berendt, ACritical Appraisal of Metaphors of Learning Across Cultures
4-4     RukminiBhaya Nair, Srividya Rajaram  & Anupama Srinivasan, Documenting Emotion: the Cultural Construction of Anger
4-4     JoshuaBorden, Getting to WHY: recognizing cultural values for a holistic approach to pragmatics
4-4     ElenaBorisova, Languague of Russian Authorities in Transition
4-4     DianaBoxer & Weihua Zhu, English as a Lingua Franca of Practice: Evidence from a Chinese Bilingual community
4-4     VaclavBrezina, Certainty, knowledge and power: marking (un)certainty in spoken English
4-4     JoanneCavallaro, Politeness and identity in an all-female setting: Be me or be nice
4-4     Stephanie W.Cheng, Code-switching in classroom interaction in an EFL context
4-4     Kyung HeeChoi & Hye Yoon Cho, Schisming in multilingual conversation
4-4     Steven AllenChristensen, Pragmatic effects of "So" in reasons for the sport psychology consultation
4-4     FlorenciaCortes-Conde, Media Made Identity: The ''Pan-Hispanic'' Community in the USA
4-4     AkkeDe Blauw & A.E. Baker, Nonpresent talk and fantasy talk in spontaneous parent-child interaction as precursors of narrative ability at age 7
4-4     VictoriyaFedorova, Pragmatic and sociocultural potential of the narrative in foreign language teaching
4-4     RebeccaFeo, Men''s presentation of concerns in calls to a relationship counselling helpline
4-4     MaicolFormentelli, Academic interactions in English as a lingua franca of communication: Address strategies and patterns of deference
4-4     JanetFu, Language Change and Translation in Changing Society
4-4     Jee-WonHahn & Hunter Hatfield, Variation in Apology Use through  Studying Group Face
4-4     YoshikoHamazaki, A Cognitive Study of a CEO''s English: The Possibility of Sociocultural Diffusion Using Primary Metaphors
4-4     AxelHarting, Written requests in German and Japanese emails
4-4     KaoriHata, How are Social Norms Represented in a Sociocultural Context?: A Case Study of Japanese Women's Narratives of Childbirth and Childcare Experiences
4-4     Chia-LingHsieh, Modality and Request in Chinese Internet Discourse
4-4     SumikoIida, Overlapping in Japanese Conversation: a functional analysis
4-4     ShunichiIshihara, How diverse are we? An empirical analysis of individual differences in the use of fillers
4-4     ErikJahner & Sara Smith, Accessibility of Referents Reveled by Relative Pitch
4-4     XiaohongJiang, Understanding metonymy: relevance theory and cognitive linguistics
4-4     TomokoKaneko, Mika Ishizuka, Takako Kobayashi, Sayo Natsukari, Naoko Ochi, Misuzu Takami  & Emiko Takano, The development of cohesive ties in English by Japanese university students
4-4     HiroakiKitano, Conjunctive expressions with verbs of saying, and the dialogic nature of language
4-4     SachikoKondo, Pragmatic Development in a Study Abroad Context: Co-constructing Accounts for Assessments
4-4     JunkoKono, Interpreting Non-literal Utterances in Elderly People with Dementia
4-4     ShuyaKushida, Confirming understanding and appreciating assistance: uses of nn-type and soo-type tokens in response to understanding check in Japanese conversation
4-4     KerstinLindmark, The use of prepositions in translated and non-translated texts – some corpus-based examples
4-4     SaekoMachi, Creating “Our Story”: Repetition in Japanese Conversation
4-4     KayokoMachida, Power management in ordinary conversation
4-4     OlgaMaxwell, Non-native prosody in clinical communication
4-4     HelleMetslang & Mati Erelt, Events on the horizon: notes on proximative and avertive verbal constructions in Estonian
4-4     SachieMiyazaki, The influence of power and distance on variation of listening behavior in Japanese
4-4     AnneMorel-Lab & Michel Wauthion, Intangible at work
4-4     NurNacar-Logie, Where the cultures are confronted : Is humour which is considered racist not in fact the basis  of anti-racist humour?
4-4     CarolineNash, Nonverbal Regulators as Precursors to Argumentative Discourse in French, Japanese and American English
4-4     YukoNomura, Expressing Emotions in Conversation:  A comparative Study of Quotation and Attitudinal Expression in Japanese and American English
4-4    EvaOgiermann & Joerg Zinken, Linguistic resources for sharing responsibilities: English, Polish, and ‘mixed’ couples dealing with everyday chores
4-4     PatchareePokasamrit, A Pragmatic and Sociolinguistic analysis of the letters to the editor in the Post Bag Column of the Bangkok Post
4-4     AndrielaRääbis, Social functions of locational inquiries in Estonian telephone conversations
4-4     JamesRagsdale, The semiotics of visual persuasion: Icons, indexes, symbols, and presentations
4-4     LidiaRodríguez-Alfano & María Eugenia Flores Treviño, “Pragmatic Information in Entries of Dictionary Definitions”
4-4     LioudmilaSavinitch & David Shapiro, Problems of multi-sensorial discourse formation with the use of implicit categories
4-4     YokoSekigawa, Co-constructing understanding in L2 pair work
4-4     MidoriShikano & Tomoko Nozawa, Can a 2-year-old bilingual code-switch?: A sociolinguistic perspective
4-4     SylwiaStaniak, Conditionals as markers of potentiality: On the example of ''regret'', ''hope'' and ''advice'' in Japanese
4-4     Sanna-KaisaTanskanen, Something old, something new: repair in computer-mediated interaction
4-4     DanièleTorck, 'Talkback'': An exploration of the nature and dialogue and argumentation in readers''reactions to Haaretz''articles
4-4     I-NiTsai, What Do We Convey With Questions?: Mandarin A-not-A Questions in Daily Conversation
4-4     TerukoUeda, Speech style shift from an interactional perspective in Doctor-Patient communication in Japanese
4-4     KishikoUeno, The Pragmatics of Interrogatives and Topic Progression in Japanese Conversational Discourse
4-4     JasperVandenberghe, New Spanish conquistadores? Newspaper articles and press releases on Spanish foreign investments in the Latin-American region
4-4     AlanWallington, The Back of Time
4-4     MalcahYaeger-Dror, Carol Rinnert  & Shoji Takano, Predisagreements in different cultural settings
4-4     HitokoYamada, Colors as ad hoc concepts
4-4     JunYashima & Natsumi Shibata, Elliptical vs. pronominal reference in Mandarin Chinese
4-4     ShokoYohena Okazaki, Japanese children’s imaginative stories as hypothesis-building
4-4     Ming-chungYu, Sociolinguistic Competence in a Second Language: Case of the Speech Act of Refusals Based on Naturally Observed Data
4-4     YuanYuan, “I am Russian but”: Qualifying an other-prescribed identity category
4-4     YantaoZeng, Irony as Cognitive Metonymy
4-4     RongZhou & Ying He, A Study of Gender Differences in Simultaneous Speech in EFL Classroom Discussion

 

 

17:15-18:45    Parallel sessions

 

4-5-01     Panel:   Michael Ewing & Ritva Laury , Clause combining in discourse: the interplay between structure and pragmatics [Part 4 of 4]
4-5-01-1     HongyinTao & Zuoyan Song, Causal Clause Sequences in Chinese Discourse
4-5-01-2     GuntherKaltenboeck, Pragmatic functions of parenthetical ''I think''
4-5-01-3     EliseKärkkäinen & Tiina Keisanen, Action combinations as templates for complex sentences

4-5-02      Panel: FrancesGiampapa , Voices from the field: Identity, language and power in multilingual research settings(Discussant: Sylvie Lamoureux)
4-5-02-1     FrancesGiampapa, Discourses of Authenticity, Legitimacy and Power: Critical Ethnography and Identity Politics in the Italian Canadian Community
4-5-02-2     AdrianaPatiño, ''Being from there'': Negotiating power relations in a sociolinguistic ethnography in Madrid
4-5-02-3     MiguelPerez Milans, Caught in a ‘West/China’ dichotomy: doing a critical sociolinguistic ethnography in Zhejiang schools

4-5-03        Lecture session : Communicative strategies
4-5-03-1      Normala Othman , Preference Organization in Adjacency Pairs in ESL Speech:  A Study of Malay Speakers
4-5-03-2     MarciaMacaulay, Humorous Repairs in Communicative Breakdowns
4-5-03-3     KazuyoMurata, Humor in Business Meetings in Japanese and in English

4-5-04        Lecture session : Naming and insults
4-5-04-1      Donna Tatsuki, Ikuhiro Tamori  & Hideo Tominaga , A Structural Analysis of the Product Names Observed in Diet Supplements
4-5-04-2     ErikFalk, Verbal insults in a divided city. Historical speech act analysis

4-5-06        Lecture session : Face management
4-5-06-1      Anna Danielewicz-Betz & Radhika Mamidi , (Over/Im) politeness and other face management strategies in the context of Saudi Arabian culture
4-5-06-2     HunterHatfield & Jee-Won Hahn, Implications of Korean apology use for face theory
4-5-06-3     SükriyeRuhi, Face as a Chronotopic, Indexical Category

4-5-07      Panel: MartinLuginbühl & Stefan Hauser , Contrastive media analysis – approaches to linguistic and cultural aspects of text types [Part 4 of 4]
4-5-07-1     Marie-NoelleGuillot, Film subtitles in a cross-cultural pragmatics perspective: issues of linguistic and cultural representations
4-5-07-2     VivianaGaballo, Punk language and culture from fanzines to webzines
4-5-07-3     Andrea Bogner & BarbaraDengel, Polyglot Intercultural Practices in Scientific Communication

4-5-08     Panel:   Ingrid Piller & Kimie Takahashi , Language learning, multilingualism and social inclusion [Part 4 of 4]
4-5-08-1     VeraWilliams Tetteh, Narrating hybrid lives: Glimpses of L2 acquisition for African resettlement in rural/regional Australia
4-5-08-2     LyndaYates, Social inclusion and the ‘reduced personality’: Migration, identity and language learning

4-5-09      Panel: Sigrid Norris , Multimodal discourse analysis: Investigating rhythms in identity construction [Part 2 of 2]
4-5-09-1     VolkerEisenlauer, "Confirm Add Friend" - automatized actions of self presentation and social formation in social network sites
4-5-09-2     DavidHughes, First person plural: Deceptive fabrication and the celluloid society

4-5-10     Panel:   Charles Coleman , Violating the script [Part 2 of 2]
4-5-10-1     CharlesColeman, Oprah Steps Out: Balancing race, gender, and class scripts
4-5-10-2     CynthiaMcCollie-Lewis & Cynthia McCollie-Lewis, Reverend Jeremiah Wright and the African American Evangelical Church

4-5-11      Panel: Scott Saft & Sachiko Ide , Emancipatory pragmatics: The search for cultural parameters in interactional discourse [Part 4 of 4]
4-5-11-1     SotaroKita, Sequentiality in simultaneous nodding in Japanese conversation
4-5-11-2     NatthapornPanpothong & Siriporn Phakdeephasook, /maypenray/ as a Reflection of Buddhist Ideology in Thai Ways of Interaction
4-5-11-3     SachikoIde, ‘The coffee is ready’: The logic of ba or field and language practice

4-5-12      Panel: Anita Fetzer & Etsuko Oishi , Context and contexts: parts meet whole? [Part 4 of 4](Discussant: Keith Allan)
4-5-12-1     Jacob L.Mey, Speech acts in context
4-5-12-2     EtsukoOishi, Situated speech acts
4-5-12-3     ThanhNyan, context and adaptive action

 

 

FRIDAY, 17 july 2009

 

8:00     Conference registration opens

 

 

8:30-10:00      Parallel sessions

 

5-1-01      Panel: Marisa Cordella , Decision-making in healthcare encounters [Part 1 of 2]
5-1-01-1     Christopher NCandlin & Catherine O'Grady, Managing risk-related decision-making in primary healthcare: contrasting lay and professional reasoning in pragmatic space
5-1-01-2     MarisaCordella, Marisa Cordella  & Simon Musgrave, Decision-making process in health encounters
5-1-01-3     RickIedema, Engaging practitioners in generating meta-discourse about their work processes in order to strengthen their communication practices

5-1-02      Panel: Yumiko Ohara , Language contact, language change, and ideological beliefs in indigenous languages in the Pan-Pacific [Part 1 of 2]
5-1-02-1     YumikoOhara, Purism and communication in the Hawaiian revitalization movement
5-1-02-2     CatherineEdmonds, When is Māori Māori in writing: A case study of year eight students in Māori immersion schools
5-1-02-3     PatrickHeinrich, It’s "iin" not "ihn"

5-1-03        Lecture session : Academic discourse 1
5-1-03-1      Esmaeel Abdollahzadeh , Discipline-specific interactions: Graduate student writers'' use of interactive features in research writing
5-1-03-2     Dianaben-Aaron, Open CourseWare, Hidden Curriculum: Involvement in the Engineering Lecture
5-1-03-3     DianaBoxer, Foot in the door or door in the face?:  The discourse of advising in higher education

5-1-04        Lecture session : Discourse  & medicine 1
5-1-04-1      Vasiliki Chrysikou , Conversational characteristics of argumentative talk in psychotherapeutic interaction
5-1-04-2     Marta MariaMorais & Edwiges Maria Morato, Repetition in Alzheimer’s disease
5-1-04-3     KathrynRoulston, Physicians’ descriptions of “underserved” populations

5-1-05        Lecture session : Discourse structure 1
5-1-05-1      Anna Bonifazi , Particles vs punctuation: how to get the discourse structure of ancient Greek texts?
5-1-05-2     PeterCollins, Information-packaging constructions: variability across four Englishes
5-1-05-3     ZarghamGhabanchi, The Discourse Function of Conjunctions in conveying the propositional meaning

5-1-06        Lecture session : Life stories
5-1-06-1      Maria das Graças Dias Pereira , Narratives of displacement and evaluation: the construction of subjectivities and moral self of a Brazilian immigrant returning from the United States of America
5-1-06-2     DidarAkar, "and then the rape happened": distancing and agency in the narratives of domestic violence

5-1-07      Panel: Katarzyna M. Jaszczolt & Keith Allan , Salient meanings [Part 1 of 2]
5-1-07-1     Katarzyna M.Jaszczolt, Salient meanings, default meanings, and automatic enrichment
5-1-07-2     RachelGiora, Oshrat Gazal, Idit Goldstein, Ofer Fein  & Argyris Stringaris, Salient and nonsalient meanings in context: Interpreting metaphors and literals by adults diagnosed with Asperger’s syndrome
5-1-07-3     EleniKapogianni, Graded salience effects on irony production and interpretation

5-1-08      Panel: KarolaPitsch & Elwys de Stefani , Participants on the move. Language and interaction in changing environments [Part 1 of 3]
5-1-08-1     Pentti OlaviHaddington, Negotiating and selecting next junction in cars while on the move
5-1-08-2     MarcRelieu, Instructional sequences of street crossing for the visually impaired and the formation of a practically accountable audible order
5-1-08-3     AkiraTakada, Imagined pathways: Co-constructing ecological knowledge in navigation practices among the San of the central Kalahari Desert

5-1-09        Lecture session : Register  & style 1
5-1-09-1      Lancy Fung , A Study of Indirect Style of Speech in Business Meetings
5-1-09-2     Salvio  MartínMenéndez, Why and how discourse strategies relaize registers
5-1-09-3     YoshikoMuraki & Kohji Shibano, Japanese learner contacts with Japanese: Teaching speech style shifts for advanced learners.

5-1-10        Lecture session : Discourse in context 1
5-1-10-1      Alireza Jalilifar , Generic and Linguistic Analysis of English and Persian Blurbs
5-1-10-2     YokoMizuta, A comparative analysis of verb meaning and usage  in biological and general contexts: with a special reference to translate and transform
5-1-10-3     JunOhashi, Signage and accompanying exhortations in public spaces: Cross cultural and genre theoretic perspective

5-1-11      Panel: JackBilmes & Arnulf Deppermann , Occasioned semantics: Systematic approaches to formulation in conversation [Part 1 of 3]
5-1-11-1     JackBilmes, Toward a General Methodology for Investigating Formulation in Verbal Interaction
5-1-11-2     DagmarBarth-Weingarten & Arnulf Deppermann, Third-position reformulation - The emergence of semantic taxonomies
5-1-11-3     Keun YoungSliedrecht, ‘’Multiple’’ formulations in two institutional settings

5-1-12      Panel: BarbaraKryk-Kastovsky , Intercultural (mis-)communication [Part 1 of 3]
5-1-12-1     AnnaWierzbicka, Cultural key words and cultural scripts: unrecognized ''Anglo'' assumptions as a source of miscommunication and cross-cultural failure
5-1-12-2     CliffGoddard, Cultural keywords and cultural scripts: Divergences between Australian, American, and British English.

 

 

10:00-10-30    Coffee break

 

 

10:30-12:00    Parallel session

 

5-2-01      Panel: Marisa Cordella , Decision-making in healthcare encounters [Part 2 of 2]
5-2-01-1     SrikantSarangi, Self-other trajectories of decision making in genetic counselling
5-2-01-2     MariaStubbe & Kevin Dew, “Shall I say about 60?” The (re)construction and reification of diagnostic information in health encounters

5-2-02     Panel:   Yumiko Ohara , Language contact, language change, and ideological beliefs in indigenous languages in the Pan-Pacific [Part 2 of 2]
5-2-02-1     KatsunobuIzutsu, What is the “Correct” Ainu Language?: To Reconcile Revitalization with Preservation
5-2-02-2     GunterSenft, The Trobriand Islanders' ideology of competition and cooperation in the make -- an anthropological-linguistic case study in the times of globalization

5-2-03        Lecture session : Academic discourse 2
5-2-03-1      Sara Gesuato , Eliciting evaluation through paper review guidelines
5-2-03-2     Britt-LouiseGunnarsson, Linguistic and textual diversity on the Internet. A study of article patterns in monolingual and multilingual open access journals
5-2-03-3     LeylaUzun, Ümit Deniz Turan  & Zeynep Emeksiz, Epistemic Stance Markers in Turkish Academic Discourse

5-2-04        Lecture session : Discourse  & medicine 2
5-2-04-1      Marlene Sator , Differentiating pain in medical interviews in a headache outpatient ward.
5-2-04-2     KatieSimmons & Amanda LeCouteur, Premonitory resistance resources: Tracking the initiation of client resistance to therapist proposals in Cognitive Behavioural Therapy sessions
5-2-04-3     ThomasSpranz-Fogasy, Doctor''s Questions and Patient''s Answers - The Organization of Understanding in Doctor-Patient Interaction

5-2-05        Lecture session : Discourse structure 2
5-2-05-1      Chi-hsien Kuo , Conditional relations and discourse functions
5-2-05-2     Anabella-GloriaNiculescu-Gorpin, Words, word meaning and lexical pragmatics: a relevance-theoretic account of a Romanian corpus analysis
5-2-05-3     JesseMortelmans, Foregrounding in 13th to 17th century French

5-2-07      Panel: Katarzyna M.Jaszczolt & Keith Allan , Salient meanings [Part 2 of 2]
5-2-07-1     KeithAllan, Graded salience: probabilistic meanings in the lexicon
5-2-07-2     JirantharaSrioutai, Semantic Representation of Expressions with Past-time Reference: Evidence from English–Thai and Thai–English Translation
5-2-07-3     MichaelHaugh, Intention(ality), action and default implicatures

5-2-08      Panel: Karola Pitsch & Elwys de Stefani , Participants on the move. Language and interaction in changing environments [Part 2 of 3]
5-2-08-1     KarolaPitsch, On the interplay of grammar, interaction and space. How tour guides orient to and make visitors move in space
5-2-08-2     KristianMortensen, Moving the Interactional Body: Postural (re-)orientation in Turn-beginnings
5-2-08-3     ElwysDe Stefani, Place formulations and spatial deixis in mobile environments

5-2-09        Lecture session : Register  & style 2
5-2-09-1      Tetsuya Sato , Style-Shift and Public/Private Distinction in Online Personal Ads in Japanese
5-2-09-2     OmarSabaj Meruane, Variation of the text classes in the journals of the Scielo Chile index: Towards the delimitation of a multidisciplinary corpus of research articles in Spanish
5-2-09-3     RenateRathmayr, Pragmalinguistic diversity in job-application interviews –

5-2-10        Lecture session : Discourse in context 2
5-2-10-1      Tunde Olusola Opeibi & Aina Oluwasola , A discursive-semiotic analysis of selected SMs Text Messages in Nigeria
5-2-10-2     KarolinaSznycer, Manipulation in Vogue: a dialectical, critical discourse analysis
5-2-10-3     Hung-chunWang, Language and ideology: Gender stereotypes of female and male artistes in the Taiwanese press

5-2-11      Panel: JackBilmes & Arnulf Deppermann , Occasioned semantics: Systematic approaches to formulation in conversation [Part 2 of 3]
5-2-11-1     MakotoOmori, Constitution of Interculturality and Inter-sub-culturality in an English Conversational Exchange Program
5-2-11-2     MauriceNevile, “Killing these damn rocket launchers would be great”: formulations for distinguishing friend from foe in an Iraq War friendly fire incident
5-2-11-3     KerstinFischer & Arne Zeschel, Formulating for Another

5-2-12      Panel: Barbara Kryk-Kastovsky , Intercultural (mis-)communication [Part 2 of 3]
5-2-12-1     AnatolijDorodnych & Anna Kuzio, Frames,scripts and schemata in intercultural communication
5-2-12-2     ZosiaGolebiowski, The use of contrastive strategies in a sociology research paper:  An inter-cultural study
5-2-12-3     DeniseGassner, The use of vague language by L1 and L2 speakers of English in institutional discourse

5-2-12-4      Matylda Weidner , Nonconformist cases in Polish institutional culture

 

 

12:00-13:30    Lunch

 

 

13:30-15:00    Parallel sessions

 

5-3-01     Panel:   Karin Osvaldsson & Susan Danby , The interactional practices of children and young people using helplines
5-3-01-1     SusanDanby, Jakob Cromdal, Michael Emmison, Karin Osvaldsson, Carly W. Butler  & Daniel Persson-Thunqvist, The institutional work of responding to children’s calls to an emergency centre and a counselling helpline
5-3-01-2     J. MichaelEmmison, S. Danby  & C. Butler, ‘So maybe say “Mate, that doesn’t sound really great”’: script proposals by counselors as a mode of advice delivery on a national children’s helpline
5-3-01-3     KarinOsvaldsson & Gudrun Furumark, Talking diagnosis on a psychiatric electronic notice board.

5-3-02        Lecture session : Discourse and development
5-3-02-1      Machiko Achiba , Development of interactional competence: Changes in discourse role over cooking sessions
5-3-02-2     AverilGrieve, Pragmatic marker acquisition in the study abroad context
5-3-02-3     RebekahJohnson, Discursive Practices in the Family Context: How Adult Children and Their Parents Negotiate Identity in Family Discourse

5-3-03        Lecture session : Discourse positioning
5-3-03-1      Guy Edwards , The stance matrix
5-3-03-2     Kara MariannGilbert, Rhetorical consciousness and cultural cognizance in argument: Perspectives on diversity in Arts and Medicine
5-3-03-3     GenevièveMaheux-Pelletier, Alignments to agreement and disagreement as a conversational dimension of minority language identities

 

5-3-04        Lecture session : Orality and signing
5-3-04-1      Andrea L. Berez , Intonation and Intonation Units in Ahtna Oral Performance
5-3-04-2     JeanMulder, Oral Performance and Rhetorical Structure in Sm’algyax
5-3-04-3     Graham H.Turner, Kyra Pollitt, Andrew Merrison, Bethan Davies  & Gary Quinn, The pragmatics of dialogue interpreting between sign and speech

5-3-05        Lecture session : Discourse structure 3
5-3-05-1      Tomoko I. Sakita , Dialogic Resonance, Schematization, and Extension: In View of Discourse and Cognition
5-3-05-2     SoniaSilveira & Líllian Márcia Ferreira Divan, Categorization activities as rhetorical devices used to construct/negotiate the meaning of the actions
5-3-05-3     EtsukoYoshida, Pragmatic processes and non-sentential expressions in dialogue

5-3-06        Lecture session : Discourse resources
5-3-06-1      Mayumi Nishikawa , Procedural meaning of the discourse marker look
5-3-06-2     KazuyoshiSugawara, Personal Name as Mnemonic Device or Conversational Resource: A pragmatic/ethnographic study on the naming practice among the |Gui and ||Gana San
5-3-06-3     Marina A.Yegorova, Pragmaticalization of adjectives: great versus lovely revisited

5-3-08      Panel: KarolaPitsch & Elwys de Stefani , Participants on the move. Language and interaction in changing environments [Part 3 of 3]
5-3-08-1     ChristianLicoppe & Julien Morel, Mobile visiophony interactions :  from ‘talking heads’ to ‘show and tell’
5-3-08-2     LaurentFilliettaz, Shifting spaces as training and learning strategies: a multimodal and interactional approach to workplace learning
5-3-08-3     DanielaVeronesi, Body and space at talk: reconsidering participation in academic lectures

5-3-10        Lecture session : Discourse in context 3
5-3-10-1      Susan Hansen & Don Bysouth , "Step out of the car, ma''am.": On some features of routine traffic stops
5-3-10-2     AgnieszkaSowinska, A Critical Approach to Legitimisation and Delegitimisation in American and Iranian Nuclear Rhetoric

5-3-11      Panel: Jack Bilmes & Arnulf Deppermann , Occasioned semantics: Systematic approaches to formulation in conversation [Part 3 of 3]
5-3-11-1     JohnMoore, Empathetic formulations following displays of upset in calls to a UK mental-health information line
5-3-11-2     CadeBushnell, Categories in action: Towards a systematic analytical methodology for examining categorial formulations in talk-in-interaction
5-3-11-3     RayWilkinson, Discussion

5-3-12      Panel: Barbara Kryk-Kastovsky , Intercultural (mis-)communication [Part 3 of 3]
5-3-12-1     Maria MartaGarcia Negroni & María Laura Spoturno, Bridging gaps across cultures: The use of glosses in Chicana literature.
5-3-12-2     RichardTrappl, Intercultural Terminology and its political contexts:
5-3-12-3     JoannaKopaczyk, Communication gaps in 17th century Britain: Explaining legal Scots to English practitioners.
5-3-12-4     BarbaraKryk-Kastovsky, Intercultural miscommunication within the same community of practice? An example from Early Modern English courtroom discourse.

 

 

15:00-15:30    Coffee break

 

 

15:30-16:45    Final plenary and conference closing

                        Chair: Gillian Wigglesworth

 

5-4      Janet Holmes , Whose perspective counts?   Sociopragmatics and identity construction at work