__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

"Social Life and Meaning Construction: Integrating
Perspectives and Methodologies in the Study of Language"
3rd International Conference on Language, Culture and Mind
University of Southern Denmark
Odense (Denmark)
14-16 July 2008

__________________________________________________


The LCM committee and local organizers call for theme
session proposals for the third conference in the series
Language, Culture and Mind. The conference will be held in
modern and comfortable conference facilities in ODENSE
14TH-16TH JULY, 2008. The conference aims at establishing an
interdisciplinary forum for an integration of cognitive,
social and cultural perspectives in theoretical and
empirical studies of language and communication. The special
theme of the conference is Social Life and Meaning
Construction.

We call for contributions from scholars and scientists in
anthropology, biology, linguistics, philosophy, psychology,
semiotics, semantics, social interaction, discourse
analysis, cognitive and neuroscience, who wish both to
impart their insights and findings, and learn from other
disciplines. Preference will be given to submissions which
emphasize interdisciplinarity, the interaction between
social life, culture, mind and language, and/or
multi-methodological approaches in language and
communication sciences.

Description of the LCM conference series: see bottom.

DATES

Deadline for individual paper submissions:
January 1, 2007
Notification for Individual Papers:
March 1, 2007

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES:

Max. 500 words (including references)
To be submitted to [email protected] 
Submissions will be evaluated according to their
- Relevance
- Quality
- Coherence
- Originality
- Organization

Once your suggestion is approved, you will need to arrange
for Theme Session Contributors for your theme. They will
need to submit abstracts for their contributions and as
Theme Session Organizer you will be responsible for their
review. More than one person may organize a theme.

NOTICE: The LCM reserves the right to reject papers accepted
by Theme Session reviewers. However, this right will only be
exercised if accepted papers deviate too far from the goals
of LCM with respect to their content and/or quality.

PLENARY SPEAKERS:
                                              
Michael Chandler (University of British Columbia)
Alessandro Duranti (University of California at Los Angeles)                
Derek Edwards (University of Loughborough)
Marianne Gullberg  (Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics)
Esa Itkonen (University of Turku)

CONFERENCE WEBSITE:
http://www.lcm.sdu.dk

EARLIER LCM CONFERENCES:

1st LCM conference: Portsmouth 2004
2nd LCM conference: Paris 2006 <http://www.lcm2006.net/>

THE INTERNATIONAL LCM COMMITTEE:

Raphael Berthele
Carlos Cornejo
Caroline David
Merlin Donald
Barbara Fultner
Anders R. Hougaard
Jean Lassègue
John A Lucy
Aliyah Morgenstern
Eve Pinsker
Vera da Silva Sinha
Chris Sinha

THE LOCAL ORGANIZING COMMITTEE:

Center for Social Practises and Cognition (SoPraCon):

Rineke Brouwer
Dennis Day
Annette Grindsted
Anders R. Hougaard
Gitte R. Hougaard (Director)
Kristian Mortensen

SCIENTIFIC COMMITTEE

Anne Salazar Orvig
Meredith Williams
Todd Oakley
Jonathan Potter
Robin Wooffitt
Alan Cienki
Cornellia Müller
Ewa Dabrowska
Edy Veneziano
Shaun Gallagher
Edwin Hutchins


THE LCM CONFERENCES:

The goals of LCM conferences are to contribute to situating
the study of language in a contemporary interdisciplinary
dialogue, and to promote a better integration of cognitive
and cultural perspectives in empirical and theoretical
studies of language. Human natural languages are
biologically based, cognitively motivated, affectively rich,
socially shared, grammatically organized symbolic systems.
They provide the principal semiotic means for the complexity
and diversity of human cultural life. As has long been
recognized, no single discipline or methodology is
sufficient to capture all the dimensions of this complex and
multifaceted phenomenon, which lies at the heart of what it
is to be human.

Theories of cognition and perception, and their neural
foundations, are central to many current approaches in
language science. However, a genuinely integrative
perspective requires that attention also be paid to the
foundations of cultural life in social interaction, empathy,
mimesis, intersubjectivity, dialogicality, normativity,
agentivity and narrativity. Significant theoretical,
methodological and empirical advancements across relevant
disciplines now provide a realistic basis for such a
broadened perspective.

This conference will articulate and discuss approaches to
human natural language and to diverse genres of language
activity which aim to integrate its cultural, social,
cognitive, affective and bodily foundations. We call for
contributions from scholars and scientists in anthropology,
biology, linguistics, philosophy, psychology, semiotics,
semantics, discourse analysis, cognitive and neuroscience,
who wish both to share their insights and findings, and
learn from other disciplines. Preference will be given to
submissions which emphasize interdisciplinarity, the
interaction between culture, mind and language, and/or
multi-methodological approaches in language sciences.


Contact:

Anders R. Hougaard
Assistant professor, PhD
Institute of Language and Communication
University of Southern Denmark
Campusvej 55
DK-5230 Odense M
Denmark
Phone: +45 65503154
Fax: + 45 65932483
Email: [email protected]

__________________________________________________

InterPhil List Administration:
http://interphil.polylog.org

Intercultural Philosophy Calendar:
http://cal.polylog.org

Reply via email to