(From 2002 until 2005, this mailing list was called the ECCR mailing list)
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[eccr] DeXus - Discourse Nexus 2.0 - An international discourse studies summer school
Mon Mar 22 11:32:03 GMT 2004
DeXus - Discourse Nexus 2.0
An international discourse studies summer school
August 16th-21st, 2004
Location
Centre for Discourse Studies
Aalborg University
Denmark
Invited guests
Puleng Hanong, University of Witwatersrand, South Africa
Gunther Kress, The Institute of Education, University of London, UK
Luisa Martín Rojo, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain
Ron Scollon, Georgetown University, USA
DeXus is the name given to the Discourse Nexus alternative summer school
for discourse studies to be held yearly in the Centre for Discourse Studies
at Aalborg University. DeXus, which took place very successfully for the
first time in August 2003. The code 2.0 signifies version 2.0, the second
actualisation, with progressively refined versions to come. DeXus will
focus on innovative research in discourse studies and its application to a
variety of settings and data sets, using a mix of lectures, workshops,
group work and discussion sessions.
The goal of DeXus is to create a space in which attendees invited guests,
students, postgrads and established scholars can discuss the latest moves
in discourse studies, apply approaches in discourse studies to real world
problems, learn hands-on in a positive environment and find new relays
between academic work and social change.
We invited a number of guests to play the role of wayfinders or
'midwives'. Their job is to provide a range of resources for learning: to
give lectures, to hold workshops, to promote discussion and reflection, to
clarify methods, and to illustrate analysis.
Following the first day of lectures by the invited guests, which will
establish a common framework, we concentrate over the following three days
on two or three themes around which the group work will cluster. In the
mornings, there are workshops, and in the afternoons group work. Each group
will work on a set of problems over the three days that are to be decided
by the groups themselves. Furthermore, the wayfinders are assigned in pairs
to work with a specific thematic group on each of Days 2, 3 and 5. We trust
that the pairings of wayfinders from different disciplinary backgrounds
generates novel ideas and fruitful challenges that benefit the
problem-based learning. On the last day, all groups come together to report
on their findings, solutions and applications, with commentary and
discussion from the wayfinders.
More information about DeXus 1.0 can be found online.
http://diskurs.hum.aau.dk/english/Dexus/dexus.htm
A poster session on the first day is for those who wish to present their
research publicly. Posters are displayed at the summer school site, and
time is allotted for all participants and guests to view the posters and
talk with the postees. Posters should be no more than 1 metre (horizontal)
by 1.5 metre (vertical). They will be displayed on pin boards in a room
dedicated to the posters.
DeXus will interest students and scholars who work in the diverse fields of
discourse studies, particularly mediated discourse analysis, critical
discourse analysis, interactional sociolinguistics, linguistic
anthropology, multimodal discourse analysis, educational discourse
analysis, social semiotics, practice theory, identity and discourse, gender
and discourse.
If you are fascinated by the relations between language, discursive
practices, social action, artifacts, cultural tools, multimodal semiosis
and the reproduction of agency, identity and social ordering/organisation
you will find our intensive, alternative summer school to be very relevant.
DeXus themes include studies of discursive phenomena in relation to:
Movement/Mobility/Flow/Scale
Structure/Ordering/Organisation/Governance
Change/Intervention/Critique
Interaction/Technology/Artefact
Nature/Environment/Habitus/Context
Globalisation/Localisation
Belonging/Citizenship/Linking/Relationality
Mediation/Modality/Action/Practice
Narrative/Memory/Autobiography
Identity/Gender/'Race'/Ethnicity/Kinship
Care/Risk
Wireless LAN facilities are offered during Dexus on campus. Bring your
laptop computer with an installed wireless 802.11b Wi-Fi card (or MAC
Airport), and you can be mobile and surf the web, read email, take part in
web chat, and so on. We integrate Wi-Fi into the DeXus group work by using
groupware, which enables us to chat, share files and collaborate on
discussion topics.
The summer school is international and open to all scholars, researchers
and PhD students.
For more academic information, contact
Paul McIlvenny or Pirkko Raudaskoski.
mailto:(paul /at/ hum.aau.dk)
mailto:(pirkko /at/ hum.aau.dk)
Registration for DeXus 2.0 can be completed online. The registration
deadline is 15th June 2004. After registration you will immediately be sent
an invoice with which you can pay the fee using your local banking system.
Payment of the fee should be received by 1st July at the latest.
REGISTER HERE:
http://diskurs.hum.aau.dk/english/dexus2/registration/registration.htm
The participation fee is 3000 Danish kroner (approx. 400 Euro), which
covers administrative costs, tea/coffee and lunches every working day, and
one evening drinks reception (Monday) and one evening dinner (Thursday).
Payment of the fee secures your registration. Please contact the Bente
Vestergaard, if you need further assistance with registration and other
practicalities.
mailto:(bentev /at/ hum.aau.dk)
Under special circumstances (eg. students or scholars travelling from the
Global South) a reduced fee can be offered (please apply directly to the
secretariat).
Location, travel and accommodation information is available on this web
site. Travel and accommodation is the responsibility of the participant.
A poster (PDF) for DeXus 2.0 is available. Please download, print, post and
redistribute...
http://diskurs.hum.aau.dk/english/dexus2/Dexus2.pdf
+++
Provisional schedule
The summer school will run daily from 9:00 to 17:00 (Monday to Friday) and
9:00 to 16:00 on Saturday. The precise schedule may be altered. Unless
otherwise stated, coffee/tea, lunches and reception drinks on Monday plus
evening dinner on Thursday are included in the registration fee.
DAY 1
16.8
8:00-9:00 Registration (+laptop setup)
9:00-9.15 Opening welcome
9:15-10:30 Lecture 1
10:30-10.45 Coffee, tea, fruit etc.
10.45-12.00 Lecture 2
12:00-13:00 Lunch
13.00-14.15 Lecture 3
14.15-14.30 Coffee, tea, fruit etc.
14.30-15.45 Lecture 4
15.45-16.30 Poster session
16.30-18.00 Groupwork preparation
18.15
Reception (drinks and snacks)
19:30 Dinner (not included in fee)
DAY 2
17.8
9:00-12.00 Workshops
10.15-10.30 Coffee, tea, fruit etc.
12:00-13:00 Lunch
13.00-17.00 Thematic Groupwork
15.00-15.15 Coffee, tea, fruit etc.
19.00
Meet for drinks (not included in fee)
19:30 Dinner (not included in fee)
DAY 3
18.8
9:00-12.00 Workshops
10.15-10.30 Coffee, tea, fruit etc.
12:00-13:00 Lunch
13.00-17.00 Thematic Groupwork
15.00-15.15 Coffee, tea, fruit etc.
19:30 Dinner (not included in fee)
DAY 4
19.8
Free day Trip to Lindholm Høj Viking graveyard and museum
Trip to Aalborg Art Museum designed by the Finnish architect Alvar Aalto
19:30 DeXus Dinner
DAY 5
20.8
9:00-12.00 Thematic Groupwork
Individual consultations with guests
10.15-10.30 Coffee, tea, fruit etc.
12:00-13:00 Lunch
13.00-17.00 Thematic Groupwork
15.00-15.15 Coffee, tea, fruit etc.
19:30 Dinner (not included in fee)
DAY 6
21.8
9:00-12.00 Groupwork retrospective
10.15-10.30 Coffee, tea, fruit etc.
12:00-13:00 Lunch
13.00-16.00 Reflection and Action
Discussion and evaluation
14.00-14.15 Coffee, tea, fruit etc.
16:00 Closing of summer school
+++
Invited Guests
Puleng Hanong
Puleng Hanong is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Linguistics at the
University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa, where she teaches
Sociolinguistics, Psycholinguistics and Discourse
Analysis.
Publications include:
1995. (with Geoff Thompson). "The sound of one hand clapping: The
management of interaction in written discourse". TEXT 15(1): 103-127.
1995. "Writer responsibility in written discourse: A pilot investigation
into signalling writer commitment to evaluation in academic research
articles". Liverpool Papers in Applied Linguistics 1(1): 43-73.
1997. "Evaluated entities and parameters of value in academic research
articles". English for Specific Purposes 16(2): 101-118.
1999. "Lexical confusions in L2 written production and their implications
for Teaching materials for vocabulary development in English for Academic
Purposes: A case study of Lesotho". BOLESWA Educational Research Journal
16:1-16.
1999. "The linguistics of blame in media discourse: Language, ideology
and point of view in press reports of the 1998 Lesotho political conflict".
Lesotho Social Science Review 5(2):111-132.
1999. "The scientist and the construction of scientific knowledge:
Aspects of evidentiality in negotiating knowledge claims in scientific
research articles". Review of Southern African Studies 3(2):104-126.
2001. "Critique discourses and ideology in newspaper reports: A discourse
analysis of the South African press reports on the 1998 SADC's military
intervention in Lesotho", Discourse & Society 12(3): 347-370.
2001. Review of "Simon Cottle (ed.), Ethnic Minorities and the media.
Milton Keynes: Open University Press, 2000", Discourse & Society 12(5):
685-690.
2002. "Sex discourses and gender constructions in Southern Sotho: a case
study of police interviews of rape/sexual assault victims", Southern
African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies 20, 177-189.
2002. "English and the bilingual court proceedings in Lesotho courtroom
discourse: Linguistic or legal disempowerment, or both", in K. Legère and
S. Fitchat (eds.), Talking Freedom: Language and Democratisation in the
SADC Region, 125-141, Windhoek: Gamsberg Macmillan.
2002. Review of "Thiven Reddy, Hegemony and Resistance: Contesting
Identities in South Africa. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2000", Discourse & Society
13(1): 148-153.
2002. Review of "Deborah Schiffrin, Deborah Tannen and Heidi E. Hamilton
(eds) The Handbook of Discourse Analysis. Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2000",
Discourse & Society 13(5): 694 - 699.
2003. Review of "Discourse, Culture and the Law: The analysis of
crosstalk in the Southern African Bilingual Courtroom", AILA Review 16: 78-88.
2003. Review of "John B. Thompson, Political Scandal: Power and
Visibility in the Media Age. Cambridge: Polity Press, 2000", Discourse &
Society 14(5): 661-663.
Gunther Kress
Gunther Kress is Professor of English at The Institute of Education,
University of London.
He is Head of the School of Culture, Language and Communication, Director
of ESRC Research Project 'The production of School English' and Co-Director
of ESRC Research Project 'Biliteracies'.
His research interests include literacy, social semiotics, multimodality,
discourse analysis, learning theory and the curriculum (both English and in
general).
Publications include:
1979. (with Fowler, Roger, Hodge, Bob & Trew, T.). Language and Control.
London: Routledge.
1979. (with Fowler, Roger) Critical Linguistics. In Fowler, Roger, Hodge,
B., Kress, G. & Trew, T. (Eds.), Language and Control, London: Routledge.
1988. (with Hodge, Robert). Social Semiotics. Cambridge: Polity Press.
1993. (with Hodge, Robert). Language as Ideology (second edition).
London: Routledge.
1985. Ideological Structures in Discourse. In Dijk, T.A. van (Ed.),
Handbook of Discourse Analysis, Vol. 4, London: Academic Press.
1988. (Ed.). Communication and Culture: An Introduction. NSWU Press.
1988. Linguistic Processes in Sociocultural Practice. Oxford: OUP.
1993. Against Arbitrariness: The Social Production of the Sign as a
Foundational Issue in Critical Discourse Analysis. Discourse & Society
4(2): 169-191.
1993. Cultural Considerations in Linguistic Description. In Graddol,
David, Thompson, L. & Byram, M. (Eds.), Language and Culture, Clevedon:
Multilingual Matters.
1996. (with Leeuwen, Theo). Reading Images: The Grammar of Visual Design.
London: Routledge.
1997. Before Writing: Rethinking the Paths to Literacy. London: Routledge
2001. (with Leeuwen, Theo). Multimodal Discourse: The Modes and Media of
Contemporary Communication. London: Arnold.
2002. (with Leeuwen, Theo). Colour as a Semiotic Mode: Notes for a
Grammar of Colour. Visual Communication 1(3): 343-368.
Luisa Martín Rojo
Luisa Martín Rojo is Associate Professor in Linguistics at the Universidad
Autónoma (Madrid, Spain). She has for several years been a visiting scholar
at the International Pragmatics Association Research Center (University of
Antwerp, Belgium). Her research draws on sociolinguistic studies of the
diversity of languages, pragmatic studies of communication and discourse
analysis.
Her work at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid reflects these interests
through the subjects she teaches: Sociolinguistics, Pragmatics and
Intercultural Communication, on the Linguistics and Translation and
Interpretation degree courses, in addition to courses on Discourse Analysis
on the doctoral program.
Through her work, she attempts to gain a deeper understanding of how
domination is exercised by means of the control of language use and the
production of linguistic ideologies (imposition of languages and
communicational styles, prejudices and linguistic norms), and by means of
control of the production, circulation and reception of discourse (social
order of discourse). Her work in this main area of interest has had both
theoretical and applied dimensions. The theoretical dimension focuses on
the study of social and epistemological aspects that have contributed to
the emergence of discourse as the object of a field of knowledge and the
changes that have occurred in the task of the analyst and how it is
perceived. Her more applied work, on the other hand, deals with the way
domination is exercised, focusing on processes such as the imposition of
languages and communicational styles (communication in organizations and
gender), the commodification of languages and conversational practices, and
the construction of social representations in discourse. Dr. Martín Rojos
work shows how these representations have a key role in domination
processes: their circulation and imposition have devastating effects on
certain social groups (criminals, Spanish gypsies, women executives,
migrants, etc.), particularly when the social representations are
internalized (and especially in relation to gender).
Likewise, Dr. Martín Rojo has taken a keen interest in phenomena of
resistance to domination through processes of linguistic variation and
discourse production (jargon, alternative discourses in new social
movements). Recently, she has returned to the ethnographic approach
employed in her early work, now combined with a critical perspective of
discourse analysis, for studying the management of cultural and linguistic
diversity in Madrid schools and the ideologies underlying it. The research
project she headed, "Assimilate or Integrate? Dilemmas of educational
policies in the face of classroom multilingualism", was awarded a social
research prize, and she has just embarked on a new project, entitled: "A
socio-pragmatic analysis of intercultural communication in education:
towards integration in schools".
These are the research lines and theoretical approaches that form the basis
of Dr. Martín Rojos work, which in view of its wide-ranging nature has
always necessarily been interdisciplinary, and in many cases has involved
collaboration with other researchers. The social commitment underlying this
research obliges her to combine the academic dimension with social
intervention, and she has collaborated as an expert with the European
Observatory on Racism, Xenophobia and Antisemitism (Vienna, Austria), as
well as working on the setting up of an agreement with the Madrid City
Council for consultancy and participation in schools.
She is also on the editorial board of several journals and book series,
including Discourse & Society, Language and Politics, Estudios de
Sociolinguística, Spanish in Context, Critical Discourse Studies, The Rape
of Europe, and Political Discourse, edited by Ruth Wodak and Paul Chilton.
Publications include:
JARGONS AND LINGUISTIC DIVERSITY
1993. "De la excepción al paradigma: análisis de los fenómenos
lingüísticos de la jerga de los delincuentes españoles". In: M. Torrione
(ed.), Lengua, libertad vigilada. Toulouse Le Mirail Paris: CRIC Ophrys,
pp. 159 199.
1997. "Jargon". In: J. Verschueren, J.O. Östman, J. Blommaert, and Ch.
Bulcaen, Handbook of Pragmatics. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, pp. 2-19.
1994. "The jargon of delinquents and the study of conversational
dynamics", Journal of Pragmatics 21(3): 243-289.
2004. "Las lenguas y el poder". Barcelona Forum Internacional de las
culturas. Exposición Voces.
DISCOURSE ANALYSIS: THEORY AND PRACTICES
1997. "El orden social de los discursos", Discurso 21-22: 1-39.
1998. (edited with Whittaker, R.). Poder Decir o El poder de los
discursos. Un perspectiva crítica en el análisis del discurso. Madrid:
Arrecife - UAM - British Council.
1999. (with Whittaker, R.). "A dialogue with bureaucracy: register,
genre, and information management as constraints on interchangeability",
Journal of Pragmatics 31: 149-189.
2001. "New developments in Discourse Analysis: discourse as social
practice; Folia Linguistica. Special Issue, XXXV/1-2: 41-78.
2002. (with Gabilondo, A.). "Foucault". In: J. Verschueren, J.O. Östman,
J. Blommaert, and Ch. Bulcaen, Handbook of Pragmatics. Amsterdam: John
Benjamins.
2004. Análisis crítico del discurso. Barcelona: Ariel. (in press)
DISCOURSE ANALYSIS: GENDER STUDIES
1995. (with
1995. (with Callejo, J.). "Argumentation and inhibition: sexism in the
discourse of Spanish executives". Pragmatics 5(4): 455-484.
1997. The politics of gender: agency and self-reference in womens
discourse In: J. Blommaert (ed.), Political Linguistics. Amsterdam: John
Benjamins, pp. 231-254.
1997. "Intertextuality and the construction of a new female identity".
In: M. Bengoechea and R. Sola Buil, Intertextuality. Alcalá de Henares:
Universidad de Alcalá de Henares.
2002. (with
2004. (with Gómez Esteban, C.). El género del poder. El estilo femenino
en las organizaciones laborales. Vitoria/Gazteiz: EMAKUNDE (Instituto Vasco
de la Mujer) /Fondo Social Europeo
2004. (with Gómez Esteban, C.). Lenguaje, identidades de género y
educación. In: C. Lomas (ed.) Los chicos también lloran. Identidades
masculinas, igualdad entre los sexos y coeducación. Paidós (colección Temas
de Educación).
1999. (with Caldas- Coulthard, C.). Entre nosotras: las revistas
femeninas y la construcción de la feminidad. Buenos Aires/Barcelona:
Discurso y Sociedad. Número monográfico. 1(3).
1999. "Decálogos comunicativos para la nueva mujer: el papel de las
revistas femeninas en la construcción de la feminidad", Discurso y Sociedad
1(3): 15-50.
POLITICAL DISCOURSE, DISCOURSE AND RACISM
1994. Hablar y dejar hablar: (sobre racismo y xenofobia) (edited with A.
Gabilondo, C. Gómez Esteban and F. Arranz). Madrid: Universidad Autónoma de
Madrid.
1995. "Division and rejection: from the personification of the Gulf
conflict to the demonisation of Saddam Hussein", Discourse & Society 6(1):
49-79.
1997. (with van Dijk, T.) "There was a problem and it was solved!"
legitimating the expulsion of illegal migrants in Spanish Parliamentary
discourse", Discourse & Society 8(4): 563-606.
2000. "Spain, outer wall of the European Fortress. Analysis of the
parliamentary debates on the immigration policy in Spain". In R. Wodak & T.
van Dijk (eds.) Racism on the top. Austrian Federal Ministry of Education,
Science and culture., pp.: 169-201.
2000. "Enfrentamiento y consenso en los debates parlamentarios sobre la
política de inmigración en España". Madrid: Oralia, vol.1, nº 5.
2003. "Análisis crítico del discurso. Fronteras y exclusión social en los
discursos racistas". In L. Íñiguez (Coor.) (2003) Análisis del Discurso.
Manual para las Ciencias Sociales. Barcelona: EDIUOC.
2003. (with
INTERCULTURALITY AND EDUCATION
2003. "Ideological dilemmas in language and cultural policies in Madrid
schools". In: Donna R. Patrick & Jane Freeland (EDS.) Language Rights And
Language Survival: A Sociolinguistic Exploration. Manchester: St Jerome
Publishing, chapter 8. (in press)
2003. ¿Asimilar o integrar? Dilemas de las políticas educativas ante los
procesos migratorios. Madrid: CIDE, vol. 124.
2004. (edited with
Ron Scollon
Professor Ron Scollon is based at the Department of Linguistics, Georgetown
University, Washington DC, USA.
Publications include:
1997. Handbills, tissues, and condoms: A Site of Engagement for the
Construction of Identity in Public Discourse. Journal of Sociolinguistics,
1(1):39-61.
1998. Mediated Discourse as Social Interaction: A Study of News
Discourse. New York: Longman.
1999. Mediated discourse and social interaction. Research on Language and
Social Interaction 32(1&2):149-154.
1999. Official and Unofficial Discourses of National Identity: Questions
Raised by the Case of Contemporary Hong Kong. In Wodak, Ruth & Ludwig,
Christoph (Eds.), Challenges in a Changing World: Issues in Critical
Discourse Analysis, Vienna: Passagen Verlag.
2000. Methodological Interdiscursivity: An Ethnographic Understanding of
Unfinalisability. In Sarangi, Srikant & Coulthard, Malcolm (Eds.),
Discourse and Social Life, London: Longman.
2001. (with Suzie Wong Scollon). Intercultural Communication: A Discourse
Approach (second edition). Oxford: Blackwell.
2001. Mediated Discourse: The Nexus of Practice. London: Routledge.
2001. Action and text: Toward an integrated understanding of the place of
text in social (inter)action. In Ruth Wodak and Michael Meyer (eds.),
Methods in Critical Discourse Analysis. London: Sage, 139183.
2001. Intercultural Communication and Ethnography: Why? and Why Not? In
Barron, Colin, Bruce, Nigel & Nunan, David (Eds.), Knowledge & Discourse:
Towards an Ecology of Language, London: Longman.
2001. Multilingualism and intellectual property: Visual holophrastic
discourse and the commodity/sign. Georgetown University Round Table on
Languages and Linguistics 1999, Washington, DC, May 6-8, 1999.
2003. (with Suzie Wong Scollon). Discourses in Place: Language in the
Material World. London: Routledge.
in press. Intertextuality across communities of practice: Academics,
journalism, and advertising. In Carol Lynn Moder and Aida Martinovic-Zic
(eds.) Discourse across Languages and Cultures. Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
in press. (with Suzie Wong Scollon). Nexus Analysis: Discourse and the
Emerging Internet
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Carpentier Nico (Phd)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Katholieke Universiteit Brussel - Catholic University of Brussels
Vrijheidslaan 17 - B-1081 Brussel - Belgium
T: ++ 32 (0)2-412.42.78
F: ++ 32 (0)2/412.42.00
Office: 4/0/18
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Free University of Brussels
Centre for Media Sociology (CeMeSO)
Pleinlaan 2 - B-1050 Brussels - Belgium
T: ++ 32 (0)2-629.18.30
F: ++ 32 (0)2-629.28.61
Office: C0.05
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
European Consortium for Communication Research
Web: http://www.eccr.info
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
E-mail: (Nico.Carpentier /at/ kubrussel.ac.be)
Web: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------
ECCR-Mailing list
---
To unsubscribe, send an email message to (majordomo /at/ listserv.vub.ac.be)
with in the body of the message (NOT in the subject): unsubscribe eccr
---
ECCR - European Consortium for Communications Research
Secretariat: P.O. Box 106, B-1210 Brussels 21, Belgium
Tel.: +32-2-412 42 78/47
Fax.: +32-2-412 42 00
Email: (freenet002 /at/ pi.be) or (Rico.Lie /at/ pi.be)
URL: http://www.eccr.info
----------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]