Schedule of Events

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS

* Please note that due to unforeseen circumstances, Dr. Catedral’s and Dr. Cramer’s talk times have been switched.

Thursday, March 2, 2023

Lucy Ellis Lounge, First Floor, rm 1080

  
8:30Registration Opens
8:55 – 9:00Opening Remarks – Dr. James Yoon
9:00 – 10:00PLENARY
Dr. Rakesh Bhatt
Translanguaging and other parricidal régimes
10:00 – 10:05Break
10:05 – 10:45SPECIAL FEATURE SPEAKER
Dr. Sarah Hopkyns
Legitimizing linguistic hybridity and third spaces in English-medium higher education: A spotlight on the United Arab Emirates
10:45 – 11:15Kateryna Kravchenko and Joseph Stanley
Surzhyk: Attitudes and usage among Ukrainian people
11:15 – 11:45Ka Fai Law
Attitudes toward vernacular and formal written Cantonese in the United States and Hong Kong
11:45 – 12:15Ian Schneider and Nour Kayali
’I don’t mean to brag…but I’m like good with accents’: Stancetaking in stylized performance
12:15 – 1:00Lunch (On your own)
1:00 – 2:00PLENARY
Dr. Shalini Shankar
Braj and Yamuna Kachru Distinguished Lecture in the Linguistic Sciences
Language Materialities of Caste and Race in Global South Asia
2:00 – 2:05Break
2:05 – 2:35Ariel Chan
Code-switching and bicultural identity in Cantonese-English bilinguals
2:35 – 3:05Wenqi Zeng
The effects of phonological similarity on bilingual and bidialectal language-switching in auditory comprehension
3:05 – 3:35Elizabeth King and Haram Park
Codeswitching and the blockage of hybrid public identities for the Gyopo K-pop celebrity
3:35 – 3:45Break
3:45 – 4:15Ivan Crespo, Crystal Bonano, Suzanne Franks, Rebecca Sullivan, Lynnelle Brown
Dialectal diversity in listening materials for English as an additional language
4:15 – 4:45Zichen Wang and Fengwei Liu
‘Light’ and ‘Thick’ constructing of identities through language: Diasporic Ukrainians in a metropolitan city
4:45 – 5:00Break
5:00 – 6:00PLENARY
Dr. Jennifer Cramer
Appalachian English as a linguistic frame of reference, not a fact
  

Friday, March 3, 2023

Lucy Ellis Lounge, First Floor, rm 1080

  
8:45Registration Opens
9:00 – 10:00PLENARY
Dr. Lydia Catedral
Differences that make a difference: Language, space-time, and materiality in sociolinguistic advocacy
10:00 – 10:05Break
10:05 – 10:35Debora Amadio
Reading aloud and phonological variation in the courtroom
10:35 – 11:05Kaitlyn Owens
Doesn’t everybody want to be popular?: Variable affrication in Quebec French music
11:05 – 11:35Saeed Rezaei, Foruq Rezvani Rad, Saman Jamshidi
Freedom begets debauchery: The case of the strawman fallacy in Iranian protest slogans
11:35 – 12:05Vatcharit Chatajinda
L-1 Thai learner’s preference for Spanish regional varieties: A direct measure of the production of the Castilian theta
12:05 – 1:00Lunch (On your own)
1:00 – 1:40SPECIAL FEATURE SPEAKER
Dr. Jae DiBello Takeuchi
Linguistic microaggression: Native speaker bias and monolingual bias in Japanese-English code-switching
1:40 – 1:45Break
1:45 – 2:15Jennifer Heup, Sierra Morrissey, Christa Niemann, and Blessing Dickson
Language, regionality, and cultural identity among Jewish women in metro Detroit”
2:15 – 2:45Stephanie Agbottah and Michael Akinpelu
Toward a Bilingualism Study of French as a Foreign Language at Three Ghanian Postsecondary Institutions
2:45 – 3:00Break
3:00 – 3:30Jordan Carter
You say ‘Plantain’ and I say ‘Mofongo’: A representation of the normalization of biculturalism in Alma’s Way
3:30 – 4:00Charmaine Kong
Navigating the semiotic landscape of Cha Chaan Teng: An auto-ethnographic account of a local-global nexus in Hong Kong
4:00 – 4:15Break
4:15 – 5:15PLENARY
Dr. Alexandra Johnston
A matter of survival: Supporting diversity, difference & dialects in career pathways for linguists
5:15 – 5:30Closing Remarks – Dr. Rakesh Bhatt, Chairs