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array_files[0]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./germconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","German Cognitive Linguistics Association (GCLA/DGKL) Conferences    ","",""," German Cognitive Linguistics Association (GCLA/DGKL) Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : German CLA Conferences German Cognitive conferences (GCLA affiliate and others) Upcoming conferences The Third International Conference of the German Linguistics Association (DGKL/GCLA), with the special theme Converging Evidence, will be held in Leipzig, September 25-27, 2008. Deadline for theme sessions: 10th November, 2007; deadline for paper and poster submissions: 1st December 2007. Past conferences The Second International DGKL/GCLA Conference was held in Munich on October 5-7, 2006. Plenary speakers: Ewa Dabrowska, Dimitrij Dobrovolskij, Adele Goldberg, Zoltan Kovecses, Brigitte Nerlich, Mark Turner. On December 10-11, 2004, the international conference Current Trends in Cognitive Linguistics/Aktuelle Entwicklungen in der Kognitiven Linguistik (DGKL-2004) was held at the University of Hamburg, Germany. This was the inaugural meeting of the DGKL/GCLA. Updated 26 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[1]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./ukconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","UK Cognitive Conferences    ","",""," UK Cognitive Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : UK Cognitive Conferences UK Cognitive Linguistics Conferences (UK-CLA affiliate and others) Upcoming conferences The international conference on Language, Communication and Cognition will take place on the Falmer campus of the University of Brighton, August 4th-7th 2008. Abstracts to be submitted electronically to lcc@brighton.ac.uk . Deadline for abstracts: November 26th 2007. Past conferences 2nd Conference of the UK-Cognitive Linguistics Association: New Directions in Cognitive Linguistics, hosted at Cardiff University, August 27-30, 2007 Symposium on Language, Communication & Cognition, a workshop held jointly by the University of Portsmouth and the University of Sussex, took place May 25-26th 2006, in Brighton, Sussex, U.K. First UK Postgraduate Conference in Cognitive Linguistics (PGCCL), a one-day conference, followed on to the above symposium on Saturday, 27th May 2006. Dept. of Linguistics and English Language, University of Sussex, Brighton, U.K. New directions in Cognitive Linguistics: First UK Cognitive Linguistics conference (UK-CLC 1), University of Sussex, Brighton, U.K., 23-25 October 2005. The organizers are editing a volume based on the conference. Language, Culture and Mind: Integrating Perspectives and Methodologies, University of Portsmouth, England, 18-20 July, 2004. There is a volume planned from selected papers from the conference. Updated 15 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[2]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./frconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","French Cognitive Linguistics Conferences    ","",""," French Cognitive Linguistics Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : French CL Conferences French Cognitive Linguistics Conferences (AFLiCo affiliate and others) Upcoming conferences Past conferences The Second AFLiCo conference, Typology, Gesture and Sign, was held at the University of Lille 3, May 10-12, 2007. Besides the general session there were theme sessions on Language Typology, Signed Languages, and Gesture. Publication of the conference papers is underway. A workshop on Space and Language was held before the conference on May 9. The Second Language Culture and Mind Conference, LCM 2, was held in Paris 17-20 July, 2006. From Gram to Mind: Grammar as Cognition, the inaugural meeting of the French Cognitive Linguistics Association (AFLiCo), was held in Bordeaux, France, 19-21 May, 2005. Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[3]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./csdlconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","8K","CSDL Conferences    ","",""," CSDL Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : CSDL Conferences CSDL Conferences Upcoming CSDL conference CSDL 9: The 9th CSDL conference, Meaning, Form, and Body, will be hosted by the College of Arts & Sciences at Case Western University. The organizers are Fey Parrill, Vera Tobin, and Mark Turner. It will take place October 18-20, 2008. The deadline for abstract submissions will be mid-May 2008. Past CSDL conferences CSDL 8: The 8th CSDL conference, CSDL 2006, took place November 3-5, 2006. It was hosted by the Department of Cognitive Science, UCSD, and organized by Seana Coulson. The keynote speakers were William Croft and Ronald Langacker. Publication of a selection of regular session papers is underway; the publisher will be CSLI Publications of Stanford, CA. In addition to the regular sessions, there were two special workshops: Language Evolution and Evolutionary Linguistics, organized by Arie Verhagen, and Constructions and Language Change, organized by Suzanne Kemmer and Martin Hilpert. CSDL 7: CSDL 2004: Experimental and Empirical Methods took place at the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada, October 8-10, 2004. Organizers: John Newman and Sally Rice. Keynote speakers: Larry Barsalou (Emory University), Russ Tomlin (University of Oregon) and Nick Evans (University of Melbourne). The conference volume, edited by John Newman and Sally Rice, is scheduled to appear with CSLI Publications in 2007. CSDL 6: The 6th CSDL conference, CSDL 6: Language, Culture and Mind, was hosted by the Department of Linguistics and the Center for the Study of Cultures, Rice University, Houston, Texas, October 11-14, 2002. Organizers: Michel Achard and Suzanne Kemmer. Keynote speakers: John Lucy (U. Chicago), Susanna Cumming (UCSB), Ronald Langacker (UCSD). Volume from CSDL 6: Language, Culture, and Mind, ed. by Michel Achard and Suzanne Kemmer, Stanford: CSLI Publications, 2004. CSDL 5: The 5th CSDL conference, CSDL 2000, was hosted by UC Santa Barbaras Center for the Study of Discourse and the Department of Linguistics, in Santa Barbara, California, May 11-14, 2000. The invited speakers were Kathryn BOCK (Illinois), Wallace CHAFE (Santa Barbara), Dedre GENTNER (Northwestern), Rachel GIORA (Tel Aviv), George LAKOFF (Berkeley), Ron LANGACKER (San Diego), Charles LI (Santa Barbara), and Sandra THOMPSON (Santa Barbara). Organizers: Susanna Cumming and Jack Du Bois. CSDL 4: October 10-12, 1998, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia. Organizer: Alan Cienki. Theme sessions: Grammatical Constructions (invited speakers Joan Bybee, Brian McWhinney, T. Givon); First Language Acquisition (invited speakers Nancy Budwig, Eve Clark, Michael Tomasello); Conceptual Blending and Metaphor (invited speakers Eve Sweetser, Gilles Fauconnier, George Lakoff). Volume from CSDL 4: Conceptual and Discourse Factors in Linguistic Structure, ed. by Alan Cienki, Barbara J. Luka, and Michael B. Smith, Stanford: CSLI Publications, 2001. CSDL 3: The 3rd CSDL conference, CSDL 97, took place at the University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, May 24-26, 1997. Co-organizers: Laura Michaelis, Dan Jurafsky and Barbara Fox. Invited speakers: Herb Clark, Susanna Cumming, Walter Kintsch, George Lakoff, Dan Slobin, Elizabeth Traugott. 3 panel sessions: Spatial Relations; Text; Historical Change. Panelists included: William Croft, Gilles Fauconnier, Arthur Glenberg, Annette Herskovits, Ronald Langacker, Lise Menn, Elizabeth ODowd, Eve Sweetser, Leonard Talmy. Volume from CSDL 3: Cognition and Function in Language, ed. by Barbara Fox, Dan Jurafsky, and Laura Michaelis, Stanford: CSLI Publications, 1999. CSDL 2: The Second CSDL Conference was held at SUNY Buffalo, Buffalo, New York. Organizer: Jean-Pierre Koenig. Volume from CSDL 2: Discourse and Cognition: Bridging the Gap, ed. by Jean-Pierre Koenig, Stanford: CSLI Publications, 1998. CSDL 1: The First CSDL conference, Conceptual Structure, Discourse and Language, took place in November 1994 at UCSD, San Diego, California. Organizer: Adele Goldberg. Volume from CSDL 1: Conceptual Structure, Discourse and Language, ed. by Adele Goldberg, Stanford: CSLI Publications, 1996. Updated 15 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[4]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./russianconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","Cognitive Linguistics Conferences in Russia    ","",""," Cognitive Linguistics Conferences in Russia International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : Russia Conferences Cognitive Linguistics Conferences in Russia Upcoming conferences The Third International Conference on Cognitive Science (Biennale of Cognitive Science 2008) will be held in Moscow, Russia June 20-25, 2008. Organizer: Yuri I. Alexandrov. Invited speakers include the Nobel Prize winners Gerald Edelman and Daniel Kahneman, as well as Antonio Damasio, Marc Hauser, George Lakoff, Michael Tomasello, Anne Treisman, Stella Vosniadou and others. DEADLINE for abstract submission: December 1, 2007. Abstracts should be submitted online via the conference website. Past conferences Cognitive Linguistics International Congress, 26-28 September 2006, Tambov, Russia (Tambov State University named after G.R. Derzhavin). Conference Coordinator: Professor Liudmila Fours. The Second Biennial Conference on Cognitive Science, sponsored by the The Russian Association for Cognitive Studies and the Cognitive Science Society, took place June 9-13, 2006, in St. Petersburg, Russia. Organizer: Tatiana V. Chernigovskaya (St. Petersburg State University). Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[5]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./spconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Conferences    ","",""," Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : Spanish Cognitive Conferences Cognitive Linguistics Conferences in Spain Upcoming Cognitive Linguistics Conferences in Spain Past Conferences The 5th international conference of the Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Association (AELCO-SCOLA): Cognitive Linguistics as a Cognitive Science, was held 19-21 October 2006, in Murcia, Spain. Language Learning, Language Use and Cognitive Modelling: Applied Perspectives across Disciplines took place at the Universidad Nacional de Educacion a Distancia (UNED), Madrid, 30 March-1 April 2006. Earlier AELCO-SCOLA conferences: 2004: Universidad de Zaragoza 2002: Universitat de València 2000: Universidad Complutense de Madrid 1998: University of Alicante Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[6]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./pclaconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","PTJK/PCLA Conferences    ","",""," PTJK/PCLA Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : PTJK/PCLA Conferences PTJK/PCLA Conferences Upcoming conferences Past conferences An international conference called Perspectives on Metonymy was held in Lodz, Poland, May 6-8, 2005. At the end of September 2003, the PTJK/PCLA held a conference/seminar devoted to Imagery in Language (IMAIL) in honor of Ronald W. Langacker. The conference was planned to immediately precede the occasion of Professor Langacker receiving his Doctor Honoris Causa (honorary doctorate) from the University of Lodz. This degree ceremony took place on October 1, 2003. In 2001 the PCLA hosted an international conference Cognitive Linguistics in the Year 2001. The invited speakers included Ronald Langacker, Zoltan Kovecses, Guenter Radden, and Laura Janda. The proceedings of the conference are being published by Peter Lang Verlag. Another conference organized by members of the PCLA, entitled Cognitivism in Poetics and Stylistics, was also held in Lodz in 2001. Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[7]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./ficlaconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","6K","Finnish Cognitive Linguistics Association (FiCLA) Conferences    ","",""," Finnish Cognitive Linguistics Association (FiCLA) Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : FiCLA Conferences FiCLA Conferences Upcoming FiCLA conferences Past FiCLA conferences A symposium organized by the Finnish Cognitive Linguistics (FiCLA) on Metaphors of Power was held 12-13 October 2006 in Helsinki. A symposium organized by the Finnish Cognitive Linguistics (FiCLA) on Interdisciplinary Themes in Cognitive Language Research was held November 25-26, 2005 in Helsinki. A workshop on semantics organized by FiCLA, Cognitivism Meets Dynamism, took place June 14, 2005 in Espoo, Finland. The workshop was held in connection with the International and Interdisciplinary Conference on Adaptive Knowledge Representation and Reasoning (AKRR05) at the Helsinki University of Technology in Espoo. The 2004 FiCLA seminars were The Whole Capacity of Language at the Helsinki University of Technology in April 2004 and Processing and Experience at the University of Joensuu in September 2004. In 2003 FiCLA organized two seminars: in June, Subjectivity in Language, and in October, Module Storming, both at the University of Turku. In 2002 two FiCLA seminars were held at the University of Turku: Language in the Middle of Cognition II and Cognitive Linguistics East of Eden, the latter held in September 2002 in collaboration with the Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association affiliate. In addition, FiCLA sponsored a workshop on The Generalization of Scientific Results at the University of Joensuu. In September 2001 a FiCLA symposium on Linguistic Conceptualization and Context was held at the Abo Akademi University in Turku. In October 2000, FiCLA organized a multi-disciplinary seminar Language in the Middle of Cognition aboard M/S Viking Amorella, Turku. In May 2000, FiCLA held its first annual meeting at the University of Oulu. Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[8]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./board0507.shtml","2007-10-05","6K","ICLA Governing Board July 2005-2007    ","",""," ICLA Governing Board July 2005-2007 International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Governing Board 2005-7 ICLA Governing BoardJuly 2005-July 2007 Officers President Klaus-Uwe Panther Universität Hamburg Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik Von-Melle-Park 6 D-20146 Hamburg Germany Phone: +49-(0)40-42838-5972 Fax: +49-(0)40-42838-4856 panther AT uni-hamburg.de Secretary/Treasurer Ad Foolen Department of Linguistics Radboud University Nijmegen P.O. Box 9103 NL-6500 HD Nijmegen The Netherlands Tel: +31243237037 Fax: +313611070 a.foolen AT let.ru.nl Regular members Hubert Cuyckens Dept. of Linguistics University of Leuven Blijde-Inkomststraat 21 B-3000 Leuven Belgium Tel: +32-16-324817 Fax: +32-16324767 hubert.cuyckens AT arts.kuleuven.be Jeong-Hwa Lee Korea Digital University Dept. of Foreign Languages 4F, 190-3 Chungjeongno 2-ga, Seodaemun-gu, SEOUL 120-012 KOREA TEL. 82-2-390-4230 FAX. 82-2-390-4210 jeonglee12 AT hotmail.com David Tuggy a/c Instituto Lingüístico de Verano Apdo. 22067 14000 México, D.F. México 5573-2024 david_tuggy AT sil.org www.sil.org/~tuggyd Ex-officio members Editor in Chief, Cognitive Linguistics Until December 31, 2006: Adele Goldberg Program in Linguistics Princeton University 029 East Pyne Princeton University Princeton, NJ 08544 U.S.A. adele AT princeton.edu As of January 1, 2007: Ewa Dabrowska School of English Department of Linguistics University of Sheffield Sheffield S10 2TN UK e.dabrowska AT sheffield.ac.uk Past President Suzanne Kemmer Department of Linguistics, MS 23 Rice University P.O. Box 1892 Houston TX 77251-1892 U.S.A. Tel. (713) 348-6225 kemmer AT rice.edu Representative of ICLC 10 2007 (Krakow/Cracow) Organizing CommitteeElzbieta Tabakowska Governing Board 2001-2003 Governing Board 2003-2005 Governing Board 2005-2007 Governing Board 2007-2009(Current Board) Updated 27 July 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[9]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./lcmconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Language, Culture, and Mind conferences series    ","",""," Language, Culture, and Mind conferences series International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : Language, Culture, and Mind conference series Language, Culture, and Mind conference series Upcoming conferences The third conference in the series Language, Culture and Mind (LCM 3) will be held in Odense 14th-16th July, 2008. Special theme: Social Life and Meaning Construction. Theme session proposals due September 2007. Contact: Anders Hougaard, hougaard AT language.sdu.dk Past conferences The second conference on Language, Culture, and Mind (LCM 2) was held in Paris, July 17-20, 2006. Language, Culture and Mind: Integrating Perspectives and Methodologies (LCM 1), took place at the University of Portsmouth, England, 18-20 July, 2004. Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[10]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./ukcla.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","U.K. Cognitive Linguistics Association (UK-CLA)    ","",""," U.K. Cognitive Linguistics Association (UK-CLA) International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : UK-CLA The U.K. Cognitive Linguistics Association (UK-CLA) Founded October 2005; affiliation approved by ICLA Governing Board February 2006 Aims The central objectives of the UK-CLA are to develop and promote the multi-disciplinary field of Cognitive Linguistics within the UK, as well as contribute to the research- and event-based synergy currently growing across Europe, and to foster initiatives and exchanges at the wider international level. In addition, the Association strongly supports contacts and cooperation between its members, the development of research projects, curricula and international graduate and doctoral programmes in Cognitive Linguistics, as well as the organisation of conferences, workshops, and other relevant events. A key aspect of the work undertaken by the Association will be cooperation with other Cognitive Linguistics Associations, under the auspices of the International Cognitive Linguistics Association. The most general aim is to promote Cognitive Linguistics in all its diverse disciplinary areas, and to develop the field at the educational as well as at the professional levels of interaction. UK-CLA conferences UK-CLA website | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[11]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./csdla.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Conceptual Structure, Discourse and Language Association (CSDLA)    ","",""," Conceptual Structure, Discourse and Language Association (CSDLA) International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : CSDLA Conceptual Structure, Discourse and Language Association (CSDLA) Founded July 2005 (although informal group ran conferences from 1994); affiliation approved by the ICLA Governing Board at ICLC 9 in Seoul in July, 2005. Aims CSDL conferences CSDLA website | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[12]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./jcla.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Japanese Cognitive Linguistics Association (JCLA)    ","",""," Japanese Cognitive Linguistics Association (JCLA) International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : JCLA Japanese Cognitive Linguistics Association (JCLA) Founded September, 2000. Affiliation approved by the ICLA Governing Board at ICLC 9 in Seoul in July, 2005. Aims JCLA exists to promote research into Cognitive Linguistics and to support contacts and cooperation among its members. To this end, JCLA hosts an annual conference meeting featuring symposia, workshops, and other presentations; other seminars besides the meeting; and publishes the conference handbook and the proceedings of its annual meeting. JCLA conferences JCLA websites English version; Full version, in Japanese | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[13]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./aflico.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Association Française de Linguistique Cognitive (AFLiCo)    ","",""," Association Française de Linguistique Cognitive (AFLiCo) International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : AFLiCo Association Française de Linguistique Cognitive (AFLiCo) Founded May 2005; affiliation approved by the ICLA Governing Board at ICLC 9 in Seoul in July, 2005. Aims The Française de Linguistique Cognitive (AFLiCo) aims to bring together researchers in France who work in, or have a genuine interest in, the field of Cognitive Linguistics, by means of publications, conferences, symposia, and other activities. It is committed to promoting linguistic study within the general framework of Cognitive Linguistics both in France and at the international level. AFLiCo conferences AFLiCo website | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[14]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./gcla.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","GCLA/DGKL    ","",""," GCLA/DGKL International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : GCLA The German Cognitive Linguistics Association/Deutsche Gesellschaft für Kognitive Linguistik (GCLA/DGKL) Founded December 2004; affiliation approved by the ICLA Governing Board in March, 2005. About us The purpose of DGKL/GCLA (Deutsche Gesellschaft für Kognitive Linguistik/German Cognitive Linguistics Association) is to promote Cognitive Linguistics at the national and international levels. The association supports research and education in Cognitive Linguistics and the application of its results, in particular contacts and cooperation among its members, the development of research projects, curricula and international graduate and doctoral programs, as well as the organization of national and international conferences and workshops. Membership in the association is open to everyone who is committed to its aims as well as to its basic theoretical and methodological tenets. GCLA/DGKL conferences GCLA/DGKL website | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[15]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./rcla.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Russian Cognitive Linguists Association(RCLA)    ","",""," Russian Cognitive Linguists Association(RCLA) International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : RCLA Russian Cognitive Linguists Association (RCLA) Founded 2004; affiliation approved by the ICLA Governing Board in March, 2004. Aims RCLA conferences RCLA website | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[16]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./pcla.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Polish Cognitive Linguistics Association (PTJK/PCLA)    ","",""," Polish Cognitive Linguistics Association (PTJK/PCLA) International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : PCLA Polskie Towarzystwo Jezykoznawstwa Kognitywnego/Polish Cognitive Linguistics Association (PTJK/PCLA) Founded October 2000 in Lodz, Poland; affiliation approved by the ICLA Governing Board in September/October, 2001 Aims The aim of the organization is to promote and support research in the field of cognitive linguistics and interdisciplinary cognitive studies, organize conferences and seminars as a forum for discussion and exchange of ideas, encourage its members to offer courses in cognitive linguistics at their departments. We are also planning to publish a periodical devoted to cognitive linguistics research, and other materials as relevant. PTJK/PCLA Meetings PTJK/PCLA Webpage | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[17]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./slavic.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association (SCLA)    ","",""," Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association (SCLA) International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : SCLA The Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association Affiliation approved by the ICLA General Assembly at ICLC 7, Santa Barbara, July 2001. Aims The Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association pursues a threefold mission: To promote Cognitive Linguistics, and particularly to encourage graduate students and junior faculty to pursue research on the Slavic languages in the framework of Cognitive Linguistics To encourage the practical application of Cognitive Linguistics, particularly in the development of pedagogical materials for the teaching of Slavic languages To encourage interdisciplinary applications of Cognitive Linguistics, particularly in the area of literary analysis. SCLA conferences SCLA website | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[18]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./ficla.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Finnish Cognitive Linguistics Association (FiCLA)    ","",""," Finnish Cognitive Linguistics Association (FiCLA) International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : FiCLA The Finnish Cognitive Linguistics Association (FiCLA) Founded 1999; affiliation approved by the ICLA General Assembly at ICLC 7 in Santa Barbara, July 2001. Aims The Finnish Cognitive Linguistics Association (FiCLA) fosters dialogue between researchers interested in the relationship between language and cognition, with special emphasis on facilitating various research orientations. FiCLA conferences FiCLA website | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[19]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./aelcoscola.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Asociación Española de Lingüística Cognitiva/Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Association (AELCO-SCOLA)    ","",""," Asociación Española de Lingüística Cognitiva/Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Association (AELCO-SCOLA) International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : AELCO-SCOLA Asociación Española de Lingüística Cognitiva/Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Association (AELCO-SCOLA) Founded and informally affiliated at ICLC 5, Amsterdam in July, 1997 (although informal group ran conferences since 1994); affiliation formally approved by the ICLA General Assembly at ICLC 6 in Stockholm, July 1999. Aims The objective of AELCO-SCOLA is to foment, stimulate, and instigate, in Spain, research in Cognitive Linguistics in all its manifestations by means of whatever activity favors scientific study by Spanish linguists in this field, and the cooperation and exchange of scientific information among all researchers in this geographic area. AELCO-SCOLA meetings AELCO-SCOLA website | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[20]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./affilproc.shtml","2007-10-05","7K","Affiliation Procedure    ","",""," Affiliation Procedure International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : Affiliation procedure Conditions and Procedures for Affiliation with the ICLA How to apply for affiliation A group wishing to affiliate with the ICLA is required to submit an application to the ICLA Governing Board. The application should include the following: A statement of the desire to affiliate, based on broad adherence to the aims and scope of the ICLA A list of the groups current officers, and information about how to contact them (notably institutional affiliation, mailing address, email address, telephone and fax numbers) An indication of the groups current status (e.g. how long it has existed, how often it meets), its objectives, its recent and upcoming activities, and the number of members The groups constitution and/or other defining documents Optionally, a list of members (preferably with information about how to contact them) Optionally, a website address that can be linked to the ICLA webpage. The group website should include pages that contain the information in (b), (c), and (d) above and be regularly updated. The Governing Board will decide on applications for affiliation. New applications may be submitted at any time by sending an application and supporting documents to the ICLA President and the Secretary by email. Newly approved affiliates will be announced at the next regular Business Meeting of the Assembly of the ICLA. How to maintain affiliation To maintain affiliation, a group is merely required to file a brief yearly report with the ICLA Secretary. The yearly report should include the following: An updated list of the groups current officers, with their current affiliations and contact information A brief summary of the groups developments and activities for the year (a page is sufficient) Optionally, an updated list of members (and information about how to contact them) Anything else the groups officers care to submit. Organizations should, if possible, construct an organization website that can be linked to the ICLA affiliates page. To save time in making sure ICLA has access to the most up-to-date information on the affiliate, the ICLA Secretary/Treasurer can simply check the organizations website in lieu of requesting an annual report, to see that its information is both complete and current. All ICLA affiliate websites should include the following information, either on the affiliate homepage, or on linked pages easily visible on the affiliates homepage. The website should be in a language readable by ICLA members from different continents. Aims of the organization A list of past and upcoming conferences The affiliates basic information, which includes: Current Governing Board/officers (with the dates of their terms) Constitution and date ratified Contact information (usually, the affiliate Secretarys address) so that prospective members can join The organizations history (ideal, but optional) A link from the homepage to the ICLA homepage A working back button; that is, there should be a way to get back easily to the ICLA pages. [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[21]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./emcllistserv.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics mailing list    ","",""," Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics mailing list International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Listservs : EMCL-L Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics A new listserv dedicated to empirical testing of hypotheses in Cognitive Linguistics is now open. This e-list, the Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics List (EMCL-L), developed out of the Workshop on Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics held at Cornell University, May 2003. EMCL-L is intended as a forum for researchers interested in all aspects of empirical work in Cognitive Linguistics. This includes, but is not limited to, experimental methods, statistics, and issues relating to the ways that Cognitive Linguistics theory can be tested empirically. Feel free to post questions, observations, TOCs etc. concerned with empirical methods. (Please, no attachments.) To subscribe, send the following in the body of a plain text message to listproc@cornell.edu subscribe EMCL-L Firstname Lastname where Firstname Lastname is replaced by your real name, and you can type either in capital or small letters. Similarly, to unsubscribe send the following to the same address above: unsubscribe EMCL-L Firstname Lastname To send a message to the whole list, send the message (in plain text) to EMCL-L@cornell.edu. Send the message from the account subscribed. No attachments, please. For list-specific assistance, questions, or issues please contact the owners of the EMCL-L email list, reachable at EMCL-L-request@cornell.edu. Additional information on listserv commands is found at http://www.cit.cornell.edu/computer/email/using-lists/ Questions about the Cornell Email List service in general may be directed to listmgr@cornell.edu. | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[22]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./pnp.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","Policies and Procedures    ","",""," Policies and Procedures International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Policies and Procedures ICLA Policies and Procedures Constitution (July 1997) Approving affiliates (July 2001) Article 4 of the Constitution was modified at ICLC 7 in July, 2001, such that the ICLA Governing Board is responsible for not only setting guidelines for affiliation but also for approving affiliates. Approval of the Assembly for each affiliate is not required. See Conditions and Procedures for Affiliation with the ICLA. Cognitive Linguistics editor selection (Sept 2001) Article 8 of the Constitution was amended at ICLC 7 in July, 2001 to provide more specific wording regarding editor selection. The newly adopted wording is: The editor is appointed for an initial term of 6 years, renewable for periods of 2 years each. The year preceding her/his last as editor will be devoted to the gradual handing over of reponsibilities to the new editor. The new editor is selected by the President of the ICLA, the current editor, and the publisher, from a shortlist drawn up by the ICLA Governing Board in the year preceding the transitional year. Proposals for hosting an ICLC: Guidelines and procedures (Sept 2003) Proposals for Hosting an ICLC approved by the Board September 2003. Policy relating to selection of ICLC venues (July 2005) At the Governing Board meeting at ICLC 9 in Seoul, Korea, July 2005, the Board decided that selection of an ICLC venue for a given conference year would be done no more than 4 years in advance of the conference, so that conference venues would not be locked up far in advance before others intending to submit proposals could have a chance to submit them. Definitions and Duties of the ICLA Governing Board Roles and Non-Board ICLA Roles (July 2007) Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[23]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./confreports.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Final Conference Reports of the International Cognitive Linguistics Conferences 2001-present     ","",""," Final Conference Reports of the International Cognitive Linguistics Conferences 2001-present International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Final Conference Reports ICLC Final Conference Reports 2001-present ICLC 7 2001, Santa Barbara Updated 27 July 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[24]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./boardmtgs.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Reports on the Meetings of the ICLA Governing Board and Business Meetings, 2001-present     ","",""," Reports on the Meetings of the ICLA Governing Board and Business Meetings, 2001-present International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Meeting Reports ICLA Governing Board and Business Meeting Reports, 2001-present ICLC 7 2001, Santa Barbara, USA ICLC 8 2003, Logroño, Spain ICLC 9 2005, Seoul, Korea ICLC 10 2007, Krakow, Poland (In preparation) Updated 27 July 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[25]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./constitution.shtml","2007-10-05","8K","ICLA Constitution    ","",""," ICLA Constitution International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : ICLA Constitution ICLA Constitution Adopted on July 17, 1997, in Amsterdam, during the ICLA presidency of Ronald Langacker The organizations name is the International Cognitive Linguistics Association (abbreviated ICLA). Its purpose is to support and promote the various approaches to linguistic theory, description, and applications that collectively have come to be known as cognitive linguistics. Membership in the ICLA includes a subscription to the official journal of the ICLA, Cognitive Linguistics. Membership in the ICLA is accomplished by paying a yearly subscription/membership fee. The amount of the membership fee that goes to the ICLA is determined by the Governing Board with the approval of the Assembly. A special reduced fee is offered to facilitate student membership. The formation of national and regional branches of the ICLA is encouraged. Conditions for their affiliation with the ICLA are established by its Governing Board with the approval of the Assembly. [Modified July 2001 to allow approval by Governing Board alone, see Policies and Procedures]. The ICLA periodically holds an international conference open to all its members and others who wish to attend. The time and location of conferences are recommended by the Governing Board and approved by the Assembly. The conference normally takes place every two years. The locations shall vary to reflect the geographical spread of the ICLA community. The ICLA Assembly consists of all members who deliberate on a particular occasion, convened in either of two ways: (i) The Assembly may consist of all members who attend an open and publicized business meeting held during a regular ICLA conference. (ii) Alternatively, the Assembly may consist of all members contacted by the ICLA mailing list, provided that the Governing Board makes every reasonable effort to ensure that the communication reaches the entire ICLA membership. The Governing Board consists of the ICLA President, the Secretary/Treasurer, three regular members, and ex officio members. Ex officio members include the editor of Cognitive Linguistics, the most recent Past President of the ICLA, and a representative from the organizing committee of the next ICLA conference. The President and the three regular members are elected by the Assembly for two-year terms and the Secretary/Treasurer for a four-year term at the business meeting held during a regular ICLA conference. Nominations for these positions can be made from the floor during the meeting, or else by prior notification of the Secretary/Treasurer from any five ICLA members. The editor of Cognitive Linguistics is selected, for a term not to exceed six years, by joint approval of the Governing Board, the Assembly, and the publisher of the journal. [Editor selection procedure amended by Governing Board, July 2001, see Policies and Procedures]. If duly elected or appointed, any Board member can serve multiple terms. Day-to-day management of ICLA affairs is entrusted to the President and Secretary/Treasurer, who act on any particular matter in coordination with those within the ICLA who hold official organizational responsibilities pertaining to that matter. Approval of the Governing Board is required for decisions of a substantial nature, especially those involving multiple domains of responsibility. Decisions with major or long-term consequences may be decided by the Governing Board on an interim basis if necessary, but must be submitted to the Assembly for ultimate approval. Any two Board members have the right to call a board meeting. At each ICLA conference business meeting, the President, Secretary/Treasurer, and the editor of Cognitive Linguistics report to the Assembly concerning the execution of their responsibilities since the last such meeting. This Constitution becomes official upon approval by the Assembly at an ICLA conference business meeting; a three-fifths majority of those voting is required for adoption. The Assembly can amend the Constitution at any time by a vote with the same majority. Other decisions by the Assembly require only a simple majority of those voting. [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[26]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./iclapubs.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","ICLA-Sponsored publication venues    ","",""," ICLA-Sponsored publication venues International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : ICLA publication venues ICLA-sponsored publication venues Cognitive Linguistics is the primary journal for the field of Cognitive Linguistics. Published by Mouton, CL is sent to all ICLA members. The journal was founded at the time the ICLA was established, and the first issue appeared in 1990. The editor is selected by the ICLA in consultation with Mouton, and the editorial board meetings are held biennially at the ICLC. The current editor of the journal is Ewa Dabrowska, who began working on the journal with the previous editor, Adele Goldberg, at the end of 2006 and took over as editor-in-chief on January 1, 2007. Cognitive Linguistics Research is a monograph series which, like the journal, was founded under the auspices of the ICLA and is published by Mouton. Since its inception with the Langacker collection Concept, Image and Symbol (1990), numerous titles have appeared in the series. The current editor of the series is Dirk Geeraerts. Annual Review of Cognitive Linguistics is a review published by John Benjamins, B.V. and appearing under the auspices of the ICLA affiliate AELCO-SCOLA. Cognitive Linguistics in Practice is a series of university-level texts that is anticipated to cover all the major areas of Linguistics using the cognitive linguistic approach. Two titles have so far appeared and a wide range of others are in preparation. The CliP series is published by John Benjamins, B.V. Updated 27 July 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[27]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./iclahistory.shtml","2007-10-05","7K","ICLA History    ","",""," ICLA History International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : ICLA History ICLA: History A symposium organized by Rene Dirven, held in Duisburg in the spring of 1989, marked the birth of Cognitive Linguistics as a broadly grounded, self-conscious intellectual movement. At that conference, initiation of the journal Cognitive Linguistics was announced and plans were made to form the International Cognitive Linguistics Association. Additionally, agreement was reached to launch the monograph series Cognitive Linguistics Research. The Duisburg symposium was retroactively called the First International Cognitive Linguistics Conference. Since then, the ICLC has been held biennially. Conferences ICLC venues and main organizers: First ICLC 1989, University of Duisburg, Duisburg, Germany (Rene Dirven) Second ICLC 1991, University of California at Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, U.S. (Gene Casad) Third ICLC 1993, July 18-23, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Leuven, Belgium (Dirk Geeraerts) Fourth ICLC 1995, University of New Mexico at Albuquerque, Albuquerque, U.S. (Sherman Wilcox) Fifth ICLC 1997, Free University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands (Theo Jansen and Gisela Redeker) Sixth ICLC 1999, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden (Erling Wande) Seventh ICLC 2001, University of California at Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, U.S. (Ron Langacker) Eighth ICLC 2003, July 20-25, 2003, University of La Rioja, Logroño, Spain (Francisco J. Ruiz De Mendoza) Ninth ICLC 2005, Yonsei University, Seoul, South Korea. (Conference Chair: Hyon-Sook Shin). Tenth ICLC 2007, Jagiellonian University of Krakow, Poland (Elzbieta Tabakowska) Eleventh ICLC 2009, University of California, Berkeley (Eve Sweetser) ICLA Presidents 1990-1993 George Lakoff 1993-1995 Eve Sweetser 1995-1997 Rene Dirven 1997-1999 Ron Langacker 1999-2001 Dirk Geeraerts 2001-2003 Suzanne Kemmer 2003-2005 Suzanne Kemmer (re-elected) 2005-2007 Klaus-Uwe Panther 2007-2009 Laura Janda Cognitive Linguistics editors 1990-1995 Dirk Geeraerts 1995-2003 Arie Verhagen 2004-2006 Adele Goldberg 2006-present Ewa Dabrowska Secretary/Treasurers Regular 4-year terms begin in July, immediately after the ICLC in a given year. 1990-1993 Johan van Parijs (appointed to pre-constitution term of undefined length) 1993-1999 Marjolijn Verspoor (served 4 year term and 2 years of elected second 4 year term) 1999-2001 Margaret Winters (served 2 years of 4 year term) 2001-Dec. 2004 Marjolijn Verspoor (served 3 1/2 years of 4 year term) 2005-present, Ad Foolen (was Acting Secretary-Treasurer, Jan.-July 2005; elected to 4 year term July 2005) Reports of ICLA Board and Business Meetings 2001 Meetings, UC Santa Barbara 2003 Meetings, Logroño, Spain 2005 Meetings, Seoul, Korea Updated 27 July 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[28]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./board.shtml","2007-10-05","6K","ICLA Governing Board July 2007-2009    ","",""," ICLA Governing Board July 2007-2009 International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Governing Board 2007-9 ICLA Governing BoardJuly 2007-July 2009 Officers President Laura Janda University of North Carolina/Tromso University Slavic Dept. CB #3165 University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3165 U.S.A. laura.janda AT hum.uit.no Secretary/Treasurer Ad Foolen Department of Linguistics Radboud University Nijmegen P.O. Box 9103 NL-6500 HD Nijmegen The Netherlands Tel: +31243237037 Fax: +313611070 a.foolen AT let.ru.nl Regular members Maarten Lemmens UFR Angellier (English) Universite de Lille 3 B.P. 60149 59653 Villeneuve dAscq CEDEX France maarten.lemmens AT univ-lille3.fr David Tuggy (re-elected) a/c Instituto Lingüístico de Verano CApdo. 22067 14000 México, D.F. México 5573-2024 david_tuggy AT sil.org Arie Verhagen Chair of Dutch Linguistics Leiden University P.N. van Eyckhof 1 2311 BV Leiden The Netherlands arie.verhagen AT let.leidenuniv.nl Ex-officio members Editor in Chief, Cognitive Linguistics Ewa Dabrowska School of English Department of Linguistics University of Sheffield Sheffield S10 2TN UK e.dabrowska AT sheffield.ac.uk Past President Klaus-Uwe Panther Universität Hamburg Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik Von-Melle-Park 6 D-20146 Hamburg Germany Phone: +49-(0)40-42838-5972 Fax: +49-(0)40-42838-4856 kupanther AT t-online.de Representative of ICLC 11 2009 (Berkeley, USA) Organizing Committee Eve Sweetser Dept. of Linguistics U.C. Berkeley Berkeley CA U.S.A. sweetser AT berkeley.edu Governing Board 2001-2003 Governing Board 2003-2005 Governing Board 2005-2007 Governing Board 2007-2009 (Current Board) Updated 16 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[29]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./aims.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","ICLA Homepage    ","",""," ICLA Homepage International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Aims and Scope Aims and Scope The International Cognitive Linguistics Association (ICLA) fosters and promotes research within the perspective of cognitive linguistics. This perspective subsumes a number of concerns and broadly compatible theoretical approaches that share a common basis: the idea that language is an integral part of cognition that reflects the interaction of cultural, psychological, communicative, and functional considerations; that language can only be understood in the context of a realistic view of conceptualization and cognitive processing; and that any theoretical conception of language must be compatible with what is known about neurological organization and function. Topics of interest for cognitive linguistics include the structural characteristics of natural language categorization (such as prototypicality, metaphor, mental imagery, and cognitive models), the explicit characterization of linguistic meaning in terms appropriate to its nature (such as trajector/landmark or figure/ground organization, profiling, grounding, viewpoint, scope of predication, etc.), the functional principles of linguistic organization (such as iconicity and naturalness), the conceptual interface between syntax and semantics, the experiential and pragmatic background of language-in-use, the nature and description of linguistic constructions, the conceptual basis and structural organization of signed languages, the relation of language to thought and to human culture(s), the nature of language in its evolutionary and historical perspectives, the way that language is acquired via cognitive, communicative and general social experience, and the relationship between language and non-linguistic aspects of communication such as gesture. See About Cognitive Linguistics for more on the history, intellectual relations, and assumptions of Cognitive Linguistics. (This part of the site is still being built up as of 2007). Updated 28 July 2007 | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[30]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./memberpages.shtml","2007-10-05","9K","Member homepages    ","",""," Member homepages International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Member Homepages ICLA Member homepages The following list of ICLA member homepages is designed to be a useful resource to find out more about cognitive linguists and in particular, who is doing what research. Many people place links to their work on their pages in .pdf form for download. Browse the list and tell us about your own homepage or other relevant pages if they are not listed here. To send links, please contact the web editor . [The ICLA site does not post email addresses or email links online, to avoid webcrawlers. If your website contains a link to your personal email address, you might want to mask it or otherwise code it to reduce the possibility of getting spammed and phished.] Member homepages Ben Bergen Lera Boroditsky Paul Chilton Alan Cienki Steven Clancy Bill Croft Hubert Cuyckens Ewa Dabrowska Vyv Evans Gilles Fauconnier Ad Foolen Dirk Geeraerts Cliff Goddard Joseph Goguen Adele Goldberg Stefan Th. Gries Marcin Grygiel Peter Harder Joe Hilferty Martin Hilpert Harry Howard Dick Hudson Gerhard van Huyssteen Olaf Jäkel Laura Janda Theo Janssen Christopher Johnson Suzanne Kemmer George Lakoff Ronald Langacker Maarten Lemmens Ulrike Luedtke Dominik Lukeš Teenie Matlock Geoffrey Nathan John Newman Gary Palmer Klaus Panther Carita Paradis Fey Parrill Esther Pascual Stéphanie Pourcel Günter Radden Gisela Redeker Sally Rice Stéphane Robert Farzad Sharifian Chris Sinha Dan Slobin Eve Sweetser Dan Strack Leonard Talmy Michael Tomasello David Tuggy Mark Turner Arie Verhagen Marjolijn Verspoor Daniel Wiechmann Sherman Wilcox Maggie Winters David A. Zubin Updated 18 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[31]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./bookreviews.shtml","2007-10-05","26K","International Cognitive Linguistics Association Book Reviews    ","",""," International Cognitive Linguistics Association Book Reviews International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : ICLA book reviews ICLA book reviewsOnline reviews list, Reviews commissioned, Call for reviews, Books available for review Online reviews On this site, the ICLA presents original reviews of new works in Cognitive Linguistics. Check back frequently, as we are adding reviews regularly. To read the reviews, click on the titles below. Andreas Langlotz. 2006. Idiomatic Creativity: A Cognitive Linguistic Model of Idiom-Representations and Idiom-Variation in English. Amsterdam and Phildelphia: John Benjamins. Vyvyan Evans. 2004. The Structure of Time. Language, Meaning and Temporal Cognition. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Catherine Travis. 2005. Discourse Markers in Colombian Spanish: A Study in Polysemy. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Ray Cattell. 2006. Mind, Consciousness, and Language. London: Continuum International. Ray Gibbs, Jr. 2006. Embodiment and Cognitive Science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Dirk Geeraerts, ed. 2006. Cognitive Linguistics: Basic readings. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Yan Huang. 2006. Pragmatics. Oxford: Oxford University Press. T. Givón. 2005. Context as Other Minds. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Verena Haser. 2005. Metaphor, Metonymy, and Experientialist Philosophy. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Royal Skousen, et al. 2002. Analogical modeling. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Angeliki Athanasiadou, et al., eds. 2006. Subjectification. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Maya Hickmann and Stephane Robert, eds. 2006. Space in Languages. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. William Frawley, ed. 2005. The expression of modality. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. András Kertész. 2004. Cognitive semantics and scientific knowledge. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Richard Watts et al., eds. 2005. Politeness in Language. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Esa Itkonen 2005. Analogy as Structure and Process. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Karol Janicki 2006. Language Misconceived. Arguing for Applied Cognitive Sociolinguistics. (Lawrence Erlbaum) Liesbet Heyvaert 2003. A Cognitive-Functional Approach to Nominalization in English.Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Riitta Välimaa-Blum. 2005. Cognitive Phonology in Construction Grammar. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Vyvyan Evans and Melanie Green 2006. Cognitive Linguistics. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum; Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Michele Prandi 2004. The Building Blocks of Meaning. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Beate Hampe, ed. 2005. From Perception to Meaning. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Etsuyo Yuasa 2005. Modularity in Language. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Greg Anderson 2006. Auxiliary Verb Constructions. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Renate Bartsch 2002. Consciousness Emerging. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Sophia Marmaridou et al., eds. 2005. Reviewing Linguistic Thought. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Adele E. Goldberg 2006. Constructions at Work. New York: Oxford University Press. Alice Deignan 2005. Metaphor and Corpus Linguistics. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Ewa Dabrowska 2004. Language, Mind and Brain. Edinburgh: Edinburgh Univeersity Press. Martin Haspelmath et al., eds. 2005. The World Atlas of Language Structures. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Reviews Commissioned (Titles under review) The titles below are under review for this site. Albertazzi, Liliana (ed.) 2002. Unfolding Perceptual Continua. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Bybee, Joan. 2006. Frequency of Use and the Organization of Language. Oxford: OUP. Coulson, Seana. 2001. Semantic Leaps. Cambridge: CUP. Dirven, René, and Marjolijn H. Verspoor (eds.) 2004. Cognitive Exploration of Language and Linguistics. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Evans, Vyvyan. 2007. A Glossary of Cognitive Linguistics. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. 160 pp. Fried, Miriam and Jan-Ola Østman. 2004. Construction Grammar in Cross-language perspective. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Fried, Mirjam and Hans C. Boas, eds. 2005. Grammatical Constructions. Back to the roots. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Gonzalez-Marquez, Monica, et al., eds. 2007. Methods in Cognitive Linguistics. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Gries, Stefan Th. and Anatol Stefanowitsch, eds. 2006. Corpora in Cognitive Linguistics. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. Heine, Bernd and Tania Kuteva. 2006. The Changing Languages of Europe. Oxford: OUP. 372 pp. Kövecses, Zoltán. 2000. Metaphor and Emotion: Language, Culture, and Body in Human Feeling. Cambridge: CUP. Kövecses, Zoltán. 2005. Metaphor in Culture. Universality and Variation. Cambridge: CUP. Kövecses, Zoltán. 2006. Language, Mind and Culture: A Practical Introduction. Oxford: OUP. Kristiansen, Gitte, Michel Achard, René Dirven, Francisco J. Ruiz de Mendoza Ibanez (eds.). 2006. Cognitive Linguistics: Current Applications and Future Perspectives. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Levinson, Steven (ed.) 2006. Grammars of Space. Explorations in Cognitive Diversity. Cambridge: CUP. Lundmark, Carita. 2005. Metaphor and Creativity in British Magazine Advertising. Luleå 2005: 42. Luleå University of Technology, Department of Languages and Culture. OGrady, William. 2005. Syntactic Carpentry. An Emergentist Approach to Syntax. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Pustet, Regina. 2005. Copulas. Universals in the Categorization of the Lexicon. Oxford: OUP. Radden, Günter and René Dirven. 2007. Cognitive English Grammar.. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Tomasello, Michael (ed.). 2003. The New Psychology of Language. Vol. II. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Vega Moreno, Rosa. 2007. Creativity and Convention. The Pragmatics of Everyday Figurative Speech. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Verhagen, Arie. 2005. Constructions of Intersubjectivity. Oxford: OUP. Wanner, D. 2006. The Power of Analogy. An Essay on Historical Linguistics. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Wildgen, Wolfgang. 2004. The Evolution of Human Language. Scenarios, principles,and cultural dynamics. Amsterdam: Benjamins. Ziegeler, Debra. 2006. Interfaces with English Aspect. Diachronic and empirical studies. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: Benjamins. Call for reviews The ICLA invites authors and publishers to make their titles available for review on this page. Recent publications as well as unpublished dissertations from all areas of Cognitive Linguistics, or other areas of research that are relevant to Cognitive Linguistics, are welcome. We would especially like to see recently finished dissertations reviewed here, as we hope to make this page a place where new directions in Cognitive Linguistic research are made available to a wide audience first. Please do not send books to the ICLA, but contact the book review editor and give the title of your work along with all bibliographical information and a list of 8-10 keywords. All received titles will be listed on this page as available for review. We will only ask the publisher (or author if a review copy is unavailable from the publisher) to ship a copy of the book if the title is actually chosen for review. The ICLA also invites members as well as non-members to choose available titles in their area of expertise and write reviews of 500-1500 words. Please read this statement of Editorial Policy with writing and submission guidelines when preparing your review. Titles available for review The following titles are available for review. If you are interested in reviewing one of these, please contact the book review editor and indicate the title. The book will be sent to you. We constantly add titles to this list. Add your own book or dissertation today! Also, feel free to contact us if you would like to review titles that are not on this list. Bartsch, Renate 2005. Memory and Understanding. Concept formation in Proust’s A la recherche du temps perdu. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 160 pp. Bloor, Thomas and Meriel Bloor. 2004. The Functional Analysis of English. A Hallidayan Approach. Second Edition. Oxford: OUP. 332 pp. Bohn, Ocke-Schwen, Albert Gjedde and Anjum Saleemi (eds). 2006. In Search of a Language for the Mind-Brain. Can the Multiple Perspectives be Unified? Aarhus: Aarhus University Press. 524 pp. Branco, António, Tony McEnery and Ruslan Mitkov (eds.) 2005. Anaphora Processing. Linguistic, cognitive and computational modelling. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 449 pp. Brinton, Laurel and Elizabeth C. Traugott. 2005. Lexicalization and Language Change. Cambridge: CUP. Chafe, Wallace. 2007. The importance of not being earnest. The feeling behind laughter and humor. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Colston, Herbert L. and Albert N. Katz (eds.) 2005. Figurative Language Comprehension. Social and Cultural Influences. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. 360 pp. Contini-Morava, Ellen, Robert S. Kirsner and Betsy Rodriguez-Bachiller (eds.) 2004. Cognitive and Communicative Approaches to Linguistic Analysis. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 389 pp. Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory 1/1, 2005. Edited by Stefan Th. Gries and Anatol Stefanowitsch. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Cristofaro, Sonia. 2005. Subordination. Oxford: OUP. 372 pp. Croft, William & D. Alan Cruse. 2004. Cognitive Linguistics. Cambridge: CUP. 372 pp. Cummings, Louise. 2005. Pragmatics. Edinburgh: EUP. Anne Cutler (ed.). 2005. Twenty-first century psycholinguistics. Four cornerstones. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. 424 pp. Dancygier, Barbara & Eve Sweetser. 2005. Mental Spaces in Grammar. Cambridge: CUP. 312 pp. Dirven, René and Marjolijn H. Verspoor (eds.) 2004. Cognitive Exploration of Language and Linguistics. Second revised edition. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 277 pp. Dixon, R.M.W. 2005. A Semantic Approach to English Grammar. Oxford: OUP. 512 pp. Ellis, Ralph D. and Natika Newton (eds.) 2005. Consciousness and Emotion. Agency, conscious choice, and selective perception. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 330 pp. Gavins, Joanna. 2007. Text World Theory. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Glaz, Adam. 2002. The Dynamics of Meaning. Explorations in the Conceptual Domain of EARTH. Lublin: Maria Curie-Sklodowska University Press. 209 pp. Keywords: lexical semantics, cognitive semantics, network model, dynamic meaning, semantic space, dynamic semantic space, earth, polysemy, intercategorial tensions, intracategorial tensions Globus, Gordon G., Karl H. Pribram and Giuseppe Vitiello (eds.) 2004. Brain and Being. At the boundary between science, philosophy, language and arts. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 350 pp. Goddard, Cliff (ed.) 2006. Ethnopragmatics. Understanding Discourse in Cultural Context. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 278 pp. Gorayska, Barbara and Jacob L. Mey (eds.) 2004. Cognition and Technology. Co-existence, convergence and co-evolution. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 369 pp. Graumann, Carl Friedrich and Werner Kallmeyer (eds.) 2002. Perspective and Perspectivation in Discourse. 401 pp. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Grygiel, Marcin. 2005. Towards a Cognitive Theory of Semantic Change: Semantic Development of English Historical Near-Synonyms of MAN/MALE HUMAN BEING in Panchronic Perspective. PhD dissertation, University of Rzeszow. 297 pp. Keywords: semantic change, semantic development, conceptual blending, panchrony, polysemy Hilferty, Joseph. 2003. In Defense of Grammatical Constructions. Ph.D. thesis. Barcelona: Universitat de Barcelona. Keywords: grammatical constructions, construction grammar, constructions vs. principles, modularity, innateness. Janzen, Terry (ed.) 2005. Topics in Signed Language Interpreting. Theory and practice. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 362 pp. Johansson, Sverker 2005. Origins of Language. Constraints on hypotheses. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 346 pp. Johansson Falck, Marlene. 2005. Technology, Language and Thought - Extensions of Meaning in the English Lexicon. Luleå 2005: 31. Luleå University of Technology, Department of Languages and Culture. Koller, Veronika. 2004. Metaphor and Gender in Business Media Discourse: A Critical Cognitive Study. Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan. 256 pp. Key words: business media, cognitive semantics, Critical Discourse Analysis,language and gender, metaphor, social cognition Kuno, Susumu and Ken-ichi Takami (eds.) 2004. Functional Constraints in Grammar. On the unergative–unaccusative distinction. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 242 pp. Laffut, An. 2006. Three-Participant Constructions in English: A functional-cognitive approach to caused relations. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 268 pp. Lewandowska-Tomaszczyk, Barbara, and Alina Kwiatowska, eds. 2004. Imagery in language: Festschrift in honour of Professor Ronald W. Langacker. Lódz studies in language v. 10. Frankfurt am Main, New York: P. Lang Liddell, Scott. 2003. Grammar, Gesture, and Meaning in American Sign Language. Cambridge: CUP Linhares-Dias, Rui. 2006. How to Show Things with Words. A Study on Logic, Language and Literature. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 544 pp. Luchjenbroers, June (ed.) 2006. Cognitive Linguistics Investigations. Across languages, fields and philosophical boundaries. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Maeder, Costantino, Olga Fischer and William J. Herlofsky (eds.) 2005. Outside-In — Inside-Out. Iconicity in Language and Literature. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 427 pp. Magnusson, Ulf, Henryk Kardela and Adam Glaz (eds.) 2007. Further Insights into Semantics and Lexicography. Lublin: UMCS. [Keywords: semantics, lexical semantics, metaphor, viewing, imagery, motivation, blending, historical semantics, lexicography] Mandler, Jean M. 2004. The Foundations of Mind. Origins of Conceptual Thought. Oxford: OUP. Martín de León, Celia. 2005. Contenedores, recorridos y metas. Metáforas en la traductología funcionalista. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang. Keywords: conceptual metaphor, translation theory, german functionalism, container metaphor, transfer metaphor, path-target metaphor. 280 pp. Meulen, Alice ter and Werner Abraham (eds.) 2004. The Composition of Meaning. From lexeme to discourse. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 232 pp. Paradis, Michel 2004. A Neurolinguistic Theory of Bilingualism. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 299 pp. Pishwa, Hanna (ed.) 2006. Language and Memory. Aspects of Knowledge Representation. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 447 pp. Radden, Günter and Klaus-Uwe Panther (eds.) 2004. Studies in Linguistic Motivation. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 389 pp. Radden, Günter, Klaus-Michael Koepcke, Thomas Berg and Peter Siemund (eds.) 2007. Aspects of Meaning Construction Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Riemer, Nick. 2005. The Semantics of Polysemy. Reading Meaning in English and Warlpiri. XVI. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 487 pp. Ruiz de Mendoza Ibáñez, Francisco José (ed.) 2006. Annual Review of Cognitive Linguistics. Volume 4. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Ruiz de Mendoza Ibáñez, Francisco J. / Peña Cervel, M. Sandra (eds.) 2005. Cognitive Linguistics. Internal Dynamics and Interdisciplinary Interaction. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 432 pp. Saint-Dizier, Patrick (ed.) 2005. Computational Lexical Semantics. Cambridge: CUP. Schalley, Andrea C., Dietmar Zaefferer (Eds.) Ontolinguistics. How Ontological Status Shapes the Linguistic Coding of Concepts. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Schlesinger, Izchak M. 2006. Cognitive Space and Linguistic Case. Semantic and Syntactic Categories in English. Cambridge: CUP. Schlüter, Julia. 2005. Rhythmic Grammar. The Influence of Rhythm on Grammatical Variation and Change in English. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. xi, 393 pages. Schwarz-Friesel, Monica et al. (eds.) 2007. Anaphors in Text. Cognitive, formal, and applied approaches to anaphoric reference. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Semino, Elena and Jonathan Culpeper (eds.) 2002. Cognitive Stylistics. Language and cognition in text analysis. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 333 pp. Steube, Anita. 2004. Information Structure. Theoretical and Empirical Aspects. XXII. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 360 pp. Stukker, Ninke. 2005. Causality markers across levels of language structure. A cognitive semantic analysis of causal verbs and causal connectives in Dutch. Ph.D. Dissertation, Utrecht institute of Linguistics OTS, Utrecht University. 297 pp. Keywords: causality marking, causal connectives, causative verbs, conceptual models, prototype structure, usage-based, converging evidence Tallerman, Maggie. 2005. Language Origins. Perspectives on Evolution. Oxford: OUP. 446 pp. Trautwein, Martin. 2004. The Time Window of Language. The Interaction between Linguistic and Non-Linguistic Knowledge in the Temporal Interpretation of German and English Texts. XXII. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 387 pp. Travis, Catherine E. 2005. Discourse Markers in Colombian Spanish. A Study in Polysemy. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 327 pp. Turewicz, Kamila (ed.) 2005. Cognitive Linguistics - A user-friendly approach. Szczecin: Szczecin University Press. 128 pp. Key words: metaphor and metonymy, vantage theory, complex sentence, cognitive grammar, tense and aspect, discourse, subjectification, polysemy of prepositions. Tyler, Andrea and Vyv Evans. 2003. The Semantics of English Prepositions. Spatial Scenes, Embodied Meaning, and Cognition. Cambridge: CUP. V. Dam, Helle, Jan Engberg, Heidrun Gerzymisch-Arbogast (eds.) 2005. Knowledge Systems and Translation. (Text, Translation, Computational Processing [TTCP] 7) Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 325 pp. Velasco Sacristan, Maria Sol. 2005. Metafora y Genero: Las Metaforas de Genero en la Publicidad de British Cosmopolitan. Universidad de Valladolid. Vogel, Anna. 2004. Swedish Dimensional Adjectives. Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell International. 377 pp. Key words: dimensional adjectives, semantics, Swedish, spatial, antonymy, prototype theory, polysemy, corpus-based, elicitation tests Wierzbicka, Anna. 2006. English. Meaning and Culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Updated 23 Sept 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[32]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./research.shtml","2007-10-05","12K","Cognitive Linguistics Research and Teaching Resources    ","",""," Cognitive Linguistics Research and Teaching Resources International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : CL-related Links Cognitive Linguistics Research and Teaching Resources To suggest links for this page, contact the web editor. Journals Cognitive Linguistics, the journal of the ICLA, subscription comes with ICLA Membership) (Mouton, 1990-) Pragmatics and Cognition (Benjamins, 1993-) Annual Review of Cognitive Linguistics (Benjamins, 2003-) Constructions (peer-reviewed e-journal, University of Düsseldorf, 2004-) Cognitextes, Review of AFLiCo, the French Cognitive Linguistics Association, an ICLA affiliate organization (peer-reviewed e-journal, AFLiCO 2007-) Book series Cognitive Linguistics Research (CLR), series editors Dirk Geeraerts, Rene Dirven, John Taylor, Ronald Langacker (Mouton, 1990-) Human Cognitive Processing (HCP), series editors Marcelo Dascal, Ray Gibbs, and Jan Nuyts (Benjamins, 1998-) Cognitive Linguistics in Practice (CLiP), executive editor, Günter Radden (Benjamins, 2004-) Constructional Approaches to Language, series editors Miriam Fried, Jan-Ola Østman (Benjamins, 2004-) Language, Context, and Cognition, series editor Anita Steube (Mouton, 2004-) The Expression of Cognitive Categories (ECC), series editors Wolfgang Klein, Stephen Levinson (Mouton, 2006-) Applications of Cognitive Linguistics, series editors Gitte Kristiansen, Michel Achard, Rene Dirven, Francisco J. Ruiz de Mendoza (Mouton, 2006-) Advances in Cognitive Linguistics, series editors Vyv Evans, Ben Bergen, and Jørg Zinken (Equinox, first title forthcoming 2007) Essays: Overviews and sketches of Cognitive Linguistics ideas The Cognitive Approach to Natural Language, by Günter Radden. In 30 Years of Linguistic Evolution, ed. by Martin Pütz, (Benjamins, 1992, updated online version in preparation) Introduction to methods and generalizations, by Gilles Fauconnier. Online 1999 version of article published in Theo Janssen and Gisela Redeker, eds., Scope and Foundations of Cognitive Linguistics, CLR 15 (Mouton, 1997) Introduction: Usage-based approaches to language, by Suzanne Kemmer and Michael Barlow. In Usage-Based Models of Language, ed. by Michael Barlow and Suzanne Kemmer (CSLI, 2000, link to online version to come) Cognitive Linguistics by Laura Janda (.pdf download, originally written 2000, updated 2006) Cognitive Linguistics readers Cognitive Linguistics: Basic Readings, ed. by Dirk Geeraerts (2006, Mouton) The Cognitive Linguistics Reader, ed. by Vyv Evans, Ben Bergen, and Jørg Zinken (forthcoming July 2007, Equinox) Cognitive Linguistics textbooks Cognitive Linguistics: An Introduction, David Lee (2002, Oxford UP) Cognitive Grammar, John Taylor (2002, Oxford UP) Cognitive Linguistics, William Croft and D. Alan Cruse (2004, Cambridge UP) Cognitive Linguistics: An Introduction, Vyvyan Evans and Melanie Green (2006, Edinburgh UP) Cognitive Linguistics reference works Handbook of Cognitive Linguistics, ed. by Dirk Geeraerts and Hubert Cuyckens. (appearing Sept. 2007, Oxford UP) A Glossary of Cognitive Linguistics, by Vyvyan Evans (due out December 2007, Univ. of Utah Press) Bibliographies Cognitive Linguistics Bibliography (CogBib), (CD, Mouton 2005, free with Cognitive Linguistics subscription/ICLA membership) Bibliography of Metaphor and Metonymy (MetBib), (online subscription, Benjamins 2007, special offer for ICLA members) Cognitive Linguistics: An Introductory Bibliography, an annotated online bibliography of CL by Dick Hudson, 2000 Bibliography of Cognitive Linguistics Analyses of Slavic Data, compiled by Laura Janda and Ljiljana Saric (.pdf download) Updated version of above (.pdf download) Volumes explicitly about usage-based linguistics Barlow, Michael, and Suzanne Kemmer, eds. 2000. Usage-Based Models of Language. Stanford: CSLI Publications. Bybee, Joan. 2001. Phonology and Language Use. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (Cambridge Studies in Linguistics 94). Bybee, Joan, and Paul Hopper, eds. 2001. Frequency and the Emergence of Linguistic Structure. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. (Typological Studies in Language 45.) Mukherjee, Joybrato. 2005. English Ditransitive Verbs: Aspects of Theory, Description and a Usage-Based Model. (Language and Computers 53.) Amsterdam, New York: Rodopi. Tomasello, Michael. 2003. Constructing a Language: A Usage-Based Theory of Language Acquisition. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. Resource sites relevant to Cognitive Linguistics Conceptual Blending, online bibliography on The Infography, expert-refereed knowledge site Center for the Cognitive Science of Metaphor Online, University of Oregon Metaphor and Metonymy Abstracts, University of Leeds The Conceptual Metaphor Home Page, George Lakoff CogWeb, communication, cognition and cultural studies, UCLA Mental Space Lab, University of Southern Denmark The Center for Semiotics, Aarhus University Links to related theories Neural Theory of Language, George Lakoff Blending and Conceptual Integration, Mark Turner FrameNet, Charles Fillmore Construction Grammar Berkeley Construction Grammar, Charles Fillmore and Paul Kay (1997) Neurocognitive Linguistics, Sydney Lamb Word Grammar, Dick Hudson Updated 22 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[33]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./study.shtml","2007-10-05","9K","Study Cognitive Linguistics    ","",""," Study Cognitive Linguistics International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : CL-related Links Study Cognitive Linguistics There are large number of institutions throughout the world that employ researchers who actively pursue Cognitive Linguistics research programs. Many of these institutions have degree programs in which students can study and participate in research on Cognitive Linguistics topics, at the graduate or undergraduate level. We are collecting links to such programs here. If your program is not listed, please send information to the Web Editor. It should be noted that institutions vary as to how much a student can specialize in Cognitive Linguistics (as opposed to pursuing a broader course of study including other areas of Linguistics, Language Studies, Psychology, Cognitive Sciences etc.). For this reason, individual programs should be investigated in detail when applying for courses of study. Institutions (in alphabetical order by university) Aarhus University (Denmark) M.A. in Cognitive Semiotics Cornell University (Ithaca, New York, USA), Ph.D. in Psychology, with dissertation research in experimental cognitive linguistics Gallaudet University (Washington D.C., USA) Ph.D., M.A. in Linguistics, with concentration on sign language structure [ASL is the language of instruction] Contact: Deborah Chen Pichler (deborah.pichler AT gallaudet.edu) Kobe University (Japan) M.A. and Ph.D. in Linguistics Lund University (Sweden) Ph.D. in Linguistics Rice University (Houston Texas, USA) Ph.D., B.A. in Linguistics Universidad de Córdoba (Spain) Lic. and Ph.D. in English Linguistics Universiteit Leiden (Netherlands) M.Phil. in Linguistics University of Alberta (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada) Ph.D., M.Sc. in Linguistics University of Brighton (U.K.) M.A. and Ph.D. in Cognitive Linguistics, M.A. in Language, Communication, and Cognition Contact: Vyv Evans (vyv.evans AT brighton.ac.uk) University at Buffalo (New York, USA) Ph.D. in Linguistics University of California at Berkeley (California, USA), Ph.D., B.A. in Linguistics University of California at Merced (California, USA), Ph.D., B.A. in Social and Cognitive Sciences with track in Cognitive Science University of California at San Diego (California, USA) Ph.D. in Cognitive Science University of California at Santa Barbara (California, USA), Ph.D., B.A. in Linguistics University of Chicago (Illinois, USA) Ph.D., B.A. in Comparative Human Development University of Colorado at Boulder (Colorado, USA) Ph.D., M.A. and B.A. in Linguistics University of Hawaii at Manoa, Ph.D. in Linguistics (Hawaii, USA) M.A. in Language and Cognition Contact: Ben Bergen (bergen AT hawaii.edu) University of Helsinki (Finland) Ph.D. and M.A. in Linguistics University of Leuven (Belgium) M.A. in Cognitive and Functional Linguistics Contact: Dirk Geeraerts (dirk.geeraerts AT arts.kuleuven.ac.be, Kristin Davidse (kristin.davidse AT arts.kuleuven.ac.be). University of Manchester (U.K.) Ph.D., M.A., and B.A. in Linguistics University of New Mexico (Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA) Ph.D., M.A., B.A. in Linguistics University of Oregon (Eugene, Oregon, USA), Ph.D., M.A., and B.A. in Linguistics University of Sheffield (UK) M.A. in Applied Linguistics and B.A.in English Language with Linguistics University of Tromsø, Norway, M.A., Ph.D. in Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Updated 20 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[34]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./cl.shtml","2007-10-05","18K","About Cognitive Linguistics    ","",""," About Cognitive Linguistics International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About CL About Cognitive Linguistics Historical Background by Suzanne Kemmer Cognitive Linguistics grew out of the work of a number of researchers active in the 1970s who were interested in the relation of language and mind, and who did not follow the prevailing tendency to explain linguistic patterns by means of appeals to structural properties internal to and specific to language. Rather than attempting to segregate syntax from the rest of language in a syntactic component governed by a set of principles and elements specific to that component, the line of research followed instead was to examine the relation of language structure to things outside language: cognitive principles and mechanisms not specific to language, including principles of human categorization; pragmatic and interactional principles; and functional principles in general, such as iconicity and economy. The most influential linguists working along these lines and focusing centrally on cognitive principles and organization were Wallace Chafe, Charles Fillmore, George Lakoff, Ronald Langacker, and Leonard Talmy. Each of these linguists began developing their own approach to language description and linguistic theory, centered on a particular set of phenomena and concerns. One of the important assumptions shared by all of these scholars is that meaning is so central to language that it must be a primary focus of study. Linguistic structures serve the function of expressing meanings and hence the mappings between meaning and form are a prime subject of linguistic analysis. Linguistic forms, in this view, are closely linked to the semantic structures they are designed to express. Semantic structures of all meaningful linguistic units can and should be investigated. These views were in direct opposition to the ideas developing at the time within Chomskyan linguistics, in which meaning was interpretive and peripheral to the study of language. The central object of interest in language was syntax. The structures of language were in this view not driven by meaning, but instead were governed by principles essentially independent of meaning. Thus, the semantics associated with morphosyntactic structures did not require investigation; the focus was on language-internal structural principles as explanatory constructs. Functional linguistics also began to develop as a field in the 1970s, in the work of linguists such as Joan Bybee, Bernard Comrie, John Haiman, Paul Hopper, Sandra Thompson, and Tom Givon. The principal focus of functional linguistics is on explanatory principles that derive from language as a communicative system, whether or not these directly relate to the structure of the mind. Functional linguistics developed into discourse-functional linguistics and functional-typological linguistics, with slightly different foci, but broadly similar in aims to Cognitive Linguistics. At the same time, a historical linguistics along functional principles emerged, leading to work on principles of grammaticalization (grammaticization) by researchers such as Elizabeth Traugott and Bernd Heine. All of these theoretical currents hold that language is best studied and described with reference to its cognitive, experiential, and social contexts, which go far beyond the linguistic system proper. Other linguists developing their own frameworks for linguistic description in a cognitive direction in the 1970s were Sydney Lamb (Stratificational Linguistics, later Neurocognitive Linguistics) and Dick Hudson (Word Grammar). Much work in child language acquisition in the 1970s was influenced by Piaget and by the cognitive revolution in Psychology, so that the field of language acquisition had a strong functional/cognitive strand through this period that persists to the present. Work by Dan Slobin, Eve Clark, Elizabeth Bates and Melissa Bowerman laid the groundwork for present day cognitivist work. Also during the 1970s, Chomsky made the strong claim of innateness of the linguistic capacity leading to a great debate in the field of acquisition that still reverberates today. His idea of acquisition as a logical problem rather than an empirical problem, and view of it as a matter of minor parameter-setting operations on an innate set of rules, were rejected by functionally and cognitively oriented researchers and in general by those studying acquisition empirically, who saw the problem as one of learning, not fundamentally different from other kinds of learning. By the late 1980s, the kinds of linguistic theory development being done in particular by Fillmore, Lakoff, Langacker, and Talmy, although appearing radically different in the descriptive mechanisms proposed, could be seen to be related in fundamental ways. Fillmores ideas had developed into Frame Semantics and, in collaboration with others, Construction Grammar (Fillmore et al. 1988). Lakoff was well-known for his work on metaphor and metonymy (Lakoff 1981 and Lakoff 1987). Langackers ideas had evolved into an explicit theory known first as Space Grammar and then Cognitive Grammar (Langacker 1988). Talmy had published a number of increasingly influential papers on linguistic imaging systems (Talmy 1985a,b and 1988). Also by this time, Gilles Fauconnier had developed a theory of Mental Spaces, influenced by the views of Oswald Ducrot. This theory was later developed in collaboration with Mark Turner into a theory of Conceptual Blending, which meshes in interesting ways with both Langackers Cognitive Grammar and Lakoffs theory of Metaphor. The 1980s also saw the development of connectionist models of language processing, such as those developed by Jeff Elman and Brian MacWhinney, in which the focus was on modeling learning, specifically language acquisition, using connectionist networks. This work tied naturally in to the acquisition problem, and with the research program of Elizabeth Bates who had demonstrated the learned nature of childrens linguistic knowledge, and its grounding in cognitive and social development. Gradually, a coherent conceptual framework emerged which exposed the flaws of linguistic nativism and placed experiential learning at the center in the understanding of how children acquire language. This conception was the foundation for the research program of Michael Tomasello, who in the 1990s began to take the lead in the study of acquisition in its social, cognitive, and cultural contexts. Through the 1980s the work of Lakoff and Langacker, in particular, began to gain adherents. During this decade researchers in Poland, Belgium, Germany, and Japan began to explore linguistic problems from a cognitive standpoint, with explicit reference to the work of Lakoff and Langacker. 1987 saw the publication of Lakoffs infuential book Women, Fire and Dangerous Things, and, at almost the same time, Langackers 1987 Foundations of Cognitive Grammar Vol. 1, which had been circulating chapter by chapter since 1984. The next publication milestone was the collection Topics in Cognitive Linguistics, ed. by Brygida Rudzka-Ostyn, published by Mouton in 1988. This substantial volume contains a number seminal papers by Langacker, Talmy, and others which made it widely influential, and indeed of influence continuing to this day. In 1989, the first conference on Cognitive Linguistics was organized in Duisburg, Germany, by Rene Dirven. At that conference, it was decided to found a new organization, the International Cognitive Linguistic Association, which would hold biennial conferences to bring together researchers working in cognitive linguistics. The Duisburg conference was retroactively declared the first International Cognitive Linguistics Conference (see ICLA Organization History). The journal Cognitive Linguistics was also conceived in the mid 1980s, and its first issue appeared in 1990 under the imprint of Mouton de Gruyter, with Dirk Geeraerts as editor. At the Duisburg conference, Rene Dirven proposed a new book series, Cognitive Linguistics Research, as another publication venue for the developing field. The first CLR volume, a collection of articles by Ronald Langacker, brought together under the title Concept, Image and Symbol, came out in 1990. The following year, Volume 2 of Langackers Foundations of Cognitive Grammar appeared. During the 1990s Cognitive Linguistics became widely recognized as an important field of specialization within Linguistics, spawning numerous conferences in addition to the biennial ICLC meetings. The work of Lakoff, Langacker, and Talmy formed the leading strands of the theory, but connections with related theories such as Construction Grammar were made by many working cognitive linguists, who tended to adopt representational eclecticism while maintaining basic tenets of cognitivism. Korea, Hungary, Thailand, Croatia, and other countries began to host cognitive linguistic research and activities. The breadth of research could be seen in the journal Cognitive Linguistics which had become the official journal of the ICLA. Arie Verhagen took over as editor, leading the journal into its second phase. By the mid-1990s, Cognitive Linguistics as a field was characterized by a defining set of intellectual pursuits practiced by its adherents, summarized in the Handbook of Pragmatics under the entry for Cognitive Linguistics (Geeraerts 1995: 111-112): Because cognitive linguistics sees language as embedded in the overall cognitive capacities of man, topics of special interest for cognitive linguistics include: the structural characteristics of natural language categorization (such as prototypicality, systematic polysemy, cognitive models, mental imagery and metaphor); the functional principles of linguistic organization (such as iconicity and naturalness); the conceptual interface between syntax and semantics (as explored by cognitive grammar and construction grammar); the experiential and pragmatic background of language-in-use; and the relationship between language and thought, including questions about relativism and conceptual universals. In this summary, the strong connections between Cognitive Linguistics and the research areas of functional linguistics, linguistic description, psycholinguistics, pragmatics, and discourse studies can be seen. For many cognitive linguists, the main interest in CL lies in its provision of a better-grounded approach to and set of theoretical assumptions for syntactic and semantic theory than generative linguistics provides. For others, however, an important appeal is the opportunity to link the study of language and the mind to the study of the brain. In the 2000s regional Cognitive Linguistics Associations, affiliated to ICLA, began to emerge. Spain, Finland, Poland, Russia and Germany became the sites of new CLAs; a Slavic CLA was based in North America. Currently new Associations are being formed, serving France, Japan, Belgium, the United Kingdom, and North America. A review journal, the Annual Review of Cognitive Linguistics began its run. Adele Goldberg took over as editor of Cognitive Linguistics and continued to increase the journals reputation and prominence in Linguistics. Cognitive linguistics conferences continue to be organized in many countries, to the extent that it is difficult to keep track of them all. The ICLC was held for the first time in Asia, specifically in Seoul, Korea in July 2005. Asia has a now very significant membership base. The ICLA hopes that in the not too distant future, another Asian country will host the ICLC, such as China. The ICLA continues to foster the development of Cognitive Linguistics as a worldwide discipline, and to enhance its connection with its natural neighbor disciplines of Psychology, Anthropology, Sociology, and of course Cognitive Science. References Geeraerts, Dirk. 1995. Cognitive Linguistics. In J. Verschueren, J.-O. Östman and J. Blommaert, eds., Handbook of Pragmatics. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 111-116. Lakoff, George. 1987. Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things. What Categories Reveal about the Mind. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Lakoff, George and Johnson, Mark. 1980. Metaphors we Live by. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Lakoff, George and Johnson, Mark. 1998. Philosophy in the Flesh. The Embodied Mind and its Challenge to Western Thought. New York: Basic Books. Lamb, Sydney M. 1971. The Crooked Path of Progress in Cognitive Linguistics. Georgetown University Monograph Series on Languages and Linguistics 24:99-123. Lamb, Sydney M. 1999. Pathways of the Brain. The Neurocognitive Basis of Language. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Langacker, Ronald W. 1987. Foundations of Cognitive Grammar Vol. 1: Theoretical Prerequisites. Stanford: Stanford University Press. Langacker, Ronald W. 1990. Concept, Image, and Symbol. The Cognitive Basis of Grammar. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Langacker, Ronald W. 1991. Foundations of Cognitive Grammar Vol. 2: Descriptive Application. Stanford: Stanford University Press. See also: Cognitive Linguistics Research and Teaching Resources Updated 28 July 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[35]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./listservs.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","Cognitive Linguistics Listservs    ","",""," Cognitive Linguistics Listservs International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Listservs Listservs for Cognitive Linguistics COGLING-L: E-Mail List for Cognitive Linguists An email list for disseminating ICLA news, queries, and discussions of interest to cognitive linguists. Open to ICLA members and non-members. Cogling-l is hosted at UCSD and the listowner is Seana Coulson. You can subscribe directly by using the web subscription form at Cogling-l. Cogling-l, formerly known as Cogling, was started at UCSD in about 1991. It is archived on The Linguist list archives back to November 1999. Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics A listserv for discussions on empirical approaches and methodologies applied to Cognitive Linguistics. This e-list developed out of the Workshop on Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics held at Cornell University, May 2003. Go to EMCL-L. UK Cognitive Linguistics Association Listserve The UK Cognitive Linguistics Association, founded in 2005, now offers an active listserv. Subscription to the listserv is free and open to all scholars and students, within and outside the UK. To subscribe and receive updates on Cognitive Linguistics news and events in the UK, please go to the UK-CLA website and follow the instructions under the Email List link. Updated 27 July 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[36]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./affiliates.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","ICLA Affiliates    ","",""," ICLA Affiliates International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates Affiliates Regional, national, or language-based affiliates of ICLA are encouraged. If you would like to affiliate your group, please see the Conditions and Procedures for Affiliation. To maintain the groups affiliation, see the instructions on the same page for How to Maintain Affiliation. The Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Association (AELCO-SCOLA) The Finnish Cognitive Linguistics Association (FiCLA) The Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association (SCLA) The Polish Cognitive Linguistics Association (PTJK/PCLA) The Russian Association of Cognitive Linguists (RCLA) The German Cognitive Linguistics Association/Deutsche Gesellschaft für Kognitive Linguistik (GCLA/DGKL) The Discourse and Cognitive Linguistic Society of Korea (DISCOG) Association Française de Linguistique Cognitive (AFLiCo) The Japanese Cognitive Linguistics Association (JCLA) The Conceptual Structure, Discourse and Language Association (CSDLA) The UK Cognitive Linguistics Association (UK-CLA) new affiliate approved in Krakow Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[37]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./member.shtml","2007-10-05","6K","ICLA Membership    ","",""," ICLA Membership International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Membership Membership APPLICATION FORMS -- The main goal of the International Cognitive Linguistics Association is to disseminate its research findings among its members. Therefore the most important benefit to a membership is the journal of the ICLA, Cognitive Linguistics, which comes with the membership. Membership in the association for 2007 is &euro;65,00 for regular members (plus postage) &euro;37,00 for student members (plus postage) Surface mail postage to countries outside Germany is about &euro;9,60. See postage costs under Cognitive Linguistics for the current range of shipping costs and options. The journal publisher, Mouton de Gruyter, collects the membership fees and remits ICLAs portion to the organization. Membership benefits The journal Cognitive Linguistics Discount book prices at John Benjamins and Mouton de Gruyter A substantial reduction in the participation fee of the ICLC Conferences. To become an ICLA member Use the membership registration form to sign up as a member of the ICLA. Print the form and fill it out manually; then mail or fax it to Mouton at the address on the form. Your membership will begin with all issues in the year you sign up, i.e. joining in 2007 means that you will receive all the numbers published in 2007, for the 2007 price. If you join the ICLA after the first issues of the year have been published and wish a later start date for your journal (e.g. 2008), please indicate that on the printed form before faxing or mailing it. Retroactive subscriptions to previous years issues can also be handled, as well as sales of individual numbers; please contact the Secretary/Treasurer Ad Foolen at a.foolen AT let.ru.nl to inquire. In subsequent years, your membership will be continued automatically, unless you inform the Secretary/Treasurer (address above) in writing that you wish to resign your membership. Special offers See the Mouton de Gruyter site for special offers on cognitive linguistics titles for ICLA members. John Benjamins also provides some discounted prices for ICLA members. Institutional subscriptions The institutional price for the journal for 2007 is &euro;355 plus postage. The institutional price includes online access for no additional charge. (Print-only or online-only subscriptions are available for &euro;328). Institutional subscribers, please do not use this form. Instead, contact Mouton directly at Mouton de Gruyter, Genthiner Str. 13, 10785 Berlin, Germany, Fax: +49 30 260 05 351 . Updated 27 July 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[38]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./events.shtml","2007-10-05","7K","ICLA Events    ","",""," ICLA Events International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events Cognitive Linguistics Events; Events Relevant to Cognitive Linguistics If your organization is sponsoring a workshop or conference that has a cognitive linguistic theme or is otherwise highly relevant to Cognitive Linguistics, tell us about it and we will link it. We will post conferences not only of ICLA affiliates but also other organizations, whether cognitive or more general, and whether or not they fit the geographical categories here. Please send your entries (title of conference; web page URL; dates; abstract deadline if applicable) to Martin Hilpert, hilpert AT icsi.berkeley.edu, and we will categorize them appropriately on this page. Cognitive Linguistics Conferences/ICLA Affiliate Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Conferences (ICLCs). The official conferences of the International Cognitive Linguistics Association Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Conferences (AELCO-SCOLA affiliate; AESLA) Finnish CLA Conferences (FiCLA affiliate and others) Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association Conferences (SCLA affiliate) Polish CLA Conferences (PTJK/PCLA affiliate) Russian Cognitive Conferences (RCLA affiliate and others) German CLA Conferences (GCLA affiliate) French CLA Conferences (AFLiCo affiliate and others) Discourse and Cognitive Linguistics Society of Korea conferences (DISCOG affiliate) Japanese Cognitive Linguistics Association conferences (JCLA affiliate) Conceptual Structure, Discourse and Language Conferences (CSDLA affiliate) UK Cognitive Linguistics Conferences (UK-CLA affiliate and others) Swedish Association for Language and Cognition Conferences (SALC affiliate) Cognitive Linguistics in China Cognitive Linguistics in Central Europe Cognitive Linguistics in Portugal Cognitive Linguistics in Norway Cognitive Linguistics in Estonia Cognitive Linguistics in Taiwan Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics Conferences (EMCL series) Language, Culture and Mind conference series (LCM series) Linguistic Agency University of Duisburg Symposia (LAUD Symposium series) Related Conferences 10th International Pragmatics Conference (IPRA), 8-13 July 2007, Göteborg, Sweden. Special theme: Language data, corpora, and computational pragmatics 4th International Conference on Construction Grammar (ICCG 4), Tokyo, Sept. 1-3, 2006 Updated 24 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[39]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./pres0709.shtml","2007-10-05","6K","From the ICLA President 2007-2009    ","",""," From the ICLA President 2007-2009 International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : ICLA News, 2007-2009 From the President ICLA News, Board term 2007-2009 Laura Janda (last updated 27 July 07 with placeholder content by the webmaster) ICLC 10 in Krakow, Poland, July 2007 Founders of Cognitive Linguistics honored at ICLA/Cognitive Linguistics Jubilee in Krakow Honored for their foundational roles in Cognitive Linguistics and in the ICLA: Rene Dirven, George Lakoff, Ronald Langacker, Leonard Talmy. Laudationen delivered by: Martin Pütz (for Rene Dirven), Klaus-Uwe Panther (for George Lakoff), Suzanne Kemmer (for Ronald Langacker), and Eve Sweetser (for Leonard Talmy) Next ICL conference: ICLC 11 in Berkeley, U.S.A., July 2009. Organizer, Eve Sweetser Sign Language Interpreting at ICLCs New ICLA affiliate approved in Krakow at ICLC 10 ICLA Membership New Governing Board of ICLA (2007-2009) The elections for the Governing Board took place at the Business Meeting of the General Assembly of ICLA in Krakow, Poland on July 19, 2007. The following were elected: President: Laura Janda Regular Board members: Maarten Lemmens, David Tuggy (re-elected), and Arie Verhagen. The ex-officio members are: Past President: Klaus-Uwe Panther Representative of next conference: Eve Sweetser, Organizer of ICLC 11 in Berkeley CA, USA In addition, two continuing members are: Secretary-Treasurer: Ad Foolen (second half of four-year term begun in 2005) Editor-in-Chief of Cognitive Linguistics: Ewa Dabrowska (a 6 year term begun January 2007, with transitional editorship begun in 2006 under Adele Goldbergs chief editorship). For complete ICLA Governing Board Information see ICLA Board 2007-2009 ICLA News 2003-2005 ICLA News 2005-2007 ICLA News 2007-2009 Updated 9 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[40]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./about.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","About ICLA    ","",""," About ICLA International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA About ICLA ICLA connects cognitive linguists all over the world by organizing conferences, sponsoring a major journal and book series for relevant research, as well as other affiliated publication venues, keeping up a website and email discussion list, fostering regional affiliates, and generally providing a community for researchers in cognitive linguistics and others interested in such research. Because cognitive linguistics focuses on the relation of language to the human mind, including human cognitive and cultural models, it has natural interdisciplinary links with Psychology (both Cognitive and Social) Anthropology (both Evolutionary and Cultural), Sociology, Philosophy (especially via the study of categorization), and indeed, any field in which scholars study conventionalized knowledge systems (conceptual systems) deployed in human interaction. For more about the intellectual underpinnings and history of Cognitive Linguistics, see About Cognitive Linguistics. Members of the ICLA receive the journal Cognitive Linguistics, discounted registration at the biannual ICLC conference, and reduced prices on cognitive linguistic books from our two sponsoring publishers, Mouton de Gruyter and John Benjamins, B.V. Click on the links below to get more information about ICLA. Aims and scope From the President: ICLA news ICLA Governing Board Organization history Cognitive Linguistics and other ICLA-sponsored publication venues ICLA constitution ICLA Governing Board and business meeting reports ICLC final conference reports Policies and procedures Membership Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[41]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./index.shtml","2007-10-05","3K","ICLA Homepage    ","",""," ICLA Homepage International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[42]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org./bookreviews","2007-10-05","26K","International Cognitive Linguistics Association Book Reviews    ","",""," International Cognitive Linguistics Association Book Reviews International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : ICLA book reviews ICLA book reviewsOnline reviews list, Reviews commissioned, Call for reviews, Books available for review Online reviews On this site, the ICLA presents original reviews of new works in Cognitive Linguistics. Check back frequently, as we are adding reviews regularly. To read the reviews, click on the titles below. Andreas Langlotz. 2006. Idiomatic Creativity: A Cognitive Linguistic Model of Idiom-Representations and Idiom-Variation in English. Amsterdam and Phildelphia: John Benjamins. Vyvyan Evans. 2004. The Structure of Time. Language, Meaning and Temporal Cognition. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Catherine Travis. 2005. Discourse Markers in Colombian Spanish: A Study in Polysemy. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Ray Cattell. 2006. Mind, Consciousness, and Language. London: Continuum International. Ray Gibbs, Jr. 2006. Embodiment and Cognitive Science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Dirk Geeraerts, ed. 2006. Cognitive Linguistics: Basic readings. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Yan Huang. 2006. Pragmatics. Oxford: Oxford University Press. T. Givón. 2005. Context as Other Minds. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Verena Haser. 2005. Metaphor, Metonymy, and Experientialist Philosophy. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Royal Skousen, et al. 2002. Analogical modeling. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Angeliki Athanasiadou, et al., eds. 2006. Subjectification. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Maya Hickmann and Stephane Robert, eds. 2006. Space in Languages. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. William Frawley, ed. 2005. The expression of modality. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. András Kertész. 2004. Cognitive semantics and scientific knowledge. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Richard Watts et al., eds. 2005. Politeness in Language. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Esa Itkonen 2005. Analogy as Structure and Process. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Karol Janicki 2006. Language Misconceived. Arguing for Applied Cognitive Sociolinguistics. (Lawrence Erlbaum) Liesbet Heyvaert 2003. A Cognitive-Functional Approach to Nominalization in English.Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Riitta Välimaa-Blum. 2005. Cognitive Phonology in Construction Grammar. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Vyvyan Evans and Melanie Green 2006. Cognitive Linguistics. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum; Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Michele Prandi 2004. The Building Blocks of Meaning. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Beate Hampe, ed. 2005. From Perception to Meaning. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Etsuyo Yuasa 2005. Modularity in Language. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Greg Anderson 2006. Auxiliary Verb Constructions. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Renate Bartsch 2002. Consciousness Emerging. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Sophia Marmaridou et al., eds. 2005. Reviewing Linguistic Thought. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Adele E. Goldberg 2006. Constructions at Work. New York: Oxford University Press. Alice Deignan 2005. Metaphor and Corpus Linguistics. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Ewa Dabrowska 2004. Language, Mind and Brain. Edinburgh: Edinburgh Univeersity Press. Martin Haspelmath et al., eds. 2005. The World Atlas of Language Structures. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Reviews Commissioned (Titles under review) The titles below are under review for this site. Albertazzi, Liliana (ed.) 2002. Unfolding Perceptual Continua. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Bybee, Joan. 2006. Frequency of Use and the Organization of Language. Oxford: OUP. Coulson, Seana. 2001. Semantic Leaps. Cambridge: CUP. Dirven, René, and Marjolijn H. Verspoor (eds.) 2004. Cognitive Exploration of Language and Linguistics. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Evans, Vyvyan. 2007. A Glossary of Cognitive Linguistics. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. 160 pp. Fried, Miriam and Jan-Ola Østman. 2004. Construction Grammar in Cross-language perspective. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Fried, Mirjam and Hans C. Boas, eds. 2005. Grammatical Constructions. Back to the roots. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Gonzalez-Marquez, Monica, et al., eds. 2007. Methods in Cognitive Linguistics. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Gries, Stefan Th. and Anatol Stefanowitsch, eds. 2006. Corpora in Cognitive Linguistics. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. Heine, Bernd and Tania Kuteva. 2006. The Changing Languages of Europe. Oxford: OUP. 372 pp. Kövecses, Zoltán. 2000. Metaphor and Emotion: Language, Culture, and Body in Human Feeling. Cambridge: CUP. Kövecses, Zoltán. 2005. Metaphor in Culture. Universality and Variation. Cambridge: CUP. Kövecses, Zoltán. 2006. Language, Mind and Culture: A Practical Introduction. Oxford: OUP. Kristiansen, Gitte, Michel Achard, René Dirven, Francisco J. Ruiz de Mendoza Ibanez (eds.). 2006. Cognitive Linguistics: Current Applications and Future Perspectives. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Levinson, Steven (ed.) 2006. Grammars of Space. Explorations in Cognitive Diversity. Cambridge: CUP. Lundmark, Carita. 2005. Metaphor and Creativity in British Magazine Advertising. Luleå 2005: 42. Luleå University of Technology, Department of Languages and Culture. OGrady, William. 2005. Syntactic Carpentry. An Emergentist Approach to Syntax. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Pustet, Regina. 2005. Copulas. Universals in the Categorization of the Lexicon. Oxford: OUP. Radden, Günter and René Dirven. 2007. Cognitive English Grammar.. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Tomasello, Michael (ed.). 2003. The New Psychology of Language. Vol. II. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Vega Moreno, Rosa. 2007. Creativity and Convention. The Pragmatics of Everyday Figurative Speech. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Verhagen, Arie. 2005. Constructions of Intersubjectivity. Oxford: OUP. Wanner, D. 2006. The Power of Analogy. An Essay on Historical Linguistics. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Wildgen, Wolfgang. 2004. The Evolution of Human Language. Scenarios, principles,and cultural dynamics. Amsterdam: Benjamins. Ziegeler, Debra. 2006. Interfaces with English Aspect. Diachronic and empirical studies. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: Benjamins. Call for reviews The ICLA invites authors and publishers to make their titles available for review on this page. Recent publications as well as unpublished dissertations from all areas of Cognitive Linguistics, or other areas of research that are relevant to Cognitive Linguistics, are welcome. We would especially like to see recently finished dissertations reviewed here, as we hope to make this page a place where new directions in Cognitive Linguistic research are made available to a wide audience first. Please do not send books to the ICLA, but contact the book review editor and give the title of your work along with all bibliographical information and a list of 8-10 keywords. All received titles will be listed on this page as available for review. We will only ask the publisher (or author if a review copy is unavailable from the publisher) to ship a copy of the book if the title is actually chosen for review. The ICLA also invites members as well as non-members to choose available titles in their area of expertise and write reviews of 500-1500 words. Please read this statement of Editorial Policy with writing and submission guidelines when preparing your review. Titles available for review The following titles are available for review. If you are interested in reviewing one of these, please contact the book review editor and indicate the title. The book will be sent to you. We constantly add titles to this list. Add your own book or dissertation today! Also, feel free to contact us if you would like to review titles that are not on this list. Bartsch, Renate 2005. Memory and Understanding. Concept formation in Proust’s A la recherche du temps perdu. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 160 pp. Bloor, Thomas and Meriel Bloor. 2004. The Functional Analysis of English. A Hallidayan Approach. Second Edition. Oxford: OUP. 332 pp. Bohn, Ocke-Schwen, Albert Gjedde and Anjum Saleemi (eds). 2006. In Search of a Language for the Mind-Brain. Can the Multiple Perspectives be Unified? Aarhus: Aarhus University Press. 524 pp. Branco, António, Tony McEnery and Ruslan Mitkov (eds.) 2005. Anaphora Processing. Linguistic, cognitive and computational modelling. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 449 pp. Brinton, Laurel and Elizabeth C. Traugott. 2005. Lexicalization and Language Change. Cambridge: CUP. Chafe, Wallace. 2007. The importance of not being earnest. The feeling behind laughter and humor. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Colston, Herbert L. and Albert N. Katz (eds.) 2005. Figurative Language Comprehension. Social and Cultural Influences. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. 360 pp. Contini-Morava, Ellen, Robert S. Kirsner and Betsy Rodriguez-Bachiller (eds.) 2004. Cognitive and Communicative Approaches to Linguistic Analysis. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 389 pp. Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory 1/1, 2005. Edited by Stefan Th. Gries and Anatol Stefanowitsch. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Cristofaro, Sonia. 2005. Subordination. Oxford: OUP. 372 pp. Croft, William & D. Alan Cruse. 2004. Cognitive Linguistics. Cambridge: CUP. 372 pp. Cummings, Louise. 2005. Pragmatics. Edinburgh: EUP. Anne Cutler (ed.). 2005. Twenty-first century psycholinguistics. Four cornerstones. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. 424 pp. Dancygier, Barbara & Eve Sweetser. 2005. Mental Spaces in Grammar. Cambridge: CUP. 312 pp. Dirven, René and Marjolijn H. Verspoor (eds.) 2004. Cognitive Exploration of Language and Linguistics. Second revised edition. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 277 pp. Dixon, R.M.W. 2005. A Semantic Approach to English Grammar. Oxford: OUP. 512 pp. Ellis, Ralph D. and Natika Newton (eds.) 2005. Consciousness and Emotion. Agency, conscious choice, and selective perception. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 330 pp. Gavins, Joanna. 2007. Text World Theory. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Glaz, Adam. 2002. The Dynamics of Meaning. Explorations in the Conceptual Domain of EARTH. Lublin: Maria Curie-Sklodowska University Press. 209 pp. Keywords: lexical semantics, cognitive semantics, network model, dynamic meaning, semantic space, dynamic semantic space, earth, polysemy, intercategorial tensions, intracategorial tensions Globus, Gordon G., Karl H. Pribram and Giuseppe Vitiello (eds.) 2004. Brain and Being. At the boundary between science, philosophy, language and arts. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 350 pp. Goddard, Cliff (ed.) 2006. Ethnopragmatics. Understanding Discourse in Cultural Context. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 278 pp. Gorayska, Barbara and Jacob L. Mey (eds.) 2004. Cognition and Technology. Co-existence, convergence and co-evolution. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 369 pp. Graumann, Carl Friedrich and Werner Kallmeyer (eds.) 2002. Perspective and Perspectivation in Discourse. 401 pp. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Grygiel, Marcin. 2005. Towards a Cognitive Theory of Semantic Change: Semantic Development of English Historical Near-Synonyms of MAN/MALE HUMAN BEING in Panchronic Perspective. PhD dissertation, University of Rzeszow. 297 pp. Keywords: semantic change, semantic development, conceptual blending, panchrony, polysemy Hilferty, Joseph. 2003. In Defense of Grammatical Constructions. Ph.D. thesis. Barcelona: Universitat de Barcelona. Keywords: grammatical constructions, construction grammar, constructions vs. principles, modularity, innateness. Janzen, Terry (ed.) 2005. Topics in Signed Language Interpreting. Theory and practice. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 362 pp. Johansson, Sverker 2005. Origins of Language. Constraints on hypotheses. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 346 pp. Johansson Falck, Marlene. 2005. Technology, Language and Thought - Extensions of Meaning in the English Lexicon. Luleå 2005: 31. Luleå University of Technology, Department of Languages and Culture. Koller, Veronika. 2004. Metaphor and Gender in Business Media Discourse: A Critical Cognitive Study. Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan. 256 pp. Key words: business media, cognitive semantics, Critical Discourse Analysis,language and gender, metaphor, social cognition Kuno, Susumu and Ken-ichi Takami (eds.) 2004. Functional Constraints in Grammar. On the unergative–unaccusative distinction. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 242 pp. Laffut, An. 2006. Three-Participant Constructions in English: A functional-cognitive approach to caused relations. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 268 pp. Lewandowska-Tomaszczyk, Barbara, and Alina Kwiatowska, eds. 2004. Imagery in language: Festschrift in honour of Professor Ronald W. Langacker. Lódz studies in language v. 10. Frankfurt am Main, New York: P. Lang Liddell, Scott. 2003. Grammar, Gesture, and Meaning in American Sign Language. Cambridge: CUP Linhares-Dias, Rui. 2006. How to Show Things with Words. A Study on Logic, Language and Literature. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 544 pp. Luchjenbroers, June (ed.) 2006. Cognitive Linguistics Investigations. Across languages, fields and philosophical boundaries. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Maeder, Costantino, Olga Fischer and William J. Herlofsky (eds.) 2005. Outside-In — Inside-Out. Iconicity in Language and Literature. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 427 pp. Magnusson, Ulf, Henryk Kardela and Adam Glaz (eds.) 2007. Further Insights into Semantics and Lexicography. Lublin: UMCS. [Keywords: semantics, lexical semantics, metaphor, viewing, imagery, motivation, blending, historical semantics, lexicography] Mandler, Jean M. 2004. The Foundations of Mind. Origins of Conceptual Thought. Oxford: OUP. Martín de León, Celia. 2005. Contenedores, recorridos y metas. Metáforas en la traductología funcionalista. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang. Keywords: conceptual metaphor, translation theory, german functionalism, container metaphor, transfer metaphor, path-target metaphor. 280 pp. Meulen, Alice ter and Werner Abraham (eds.) 2004. The Composition of Meaning. From lexeme to discourse. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 232 pp. Paradis, Michel 2004. A Neurolinguistic Theory of Bilingualism. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 299 pp. Pishwa, Hanna (ed.) 2006. Language and Memory. Aspects of Knowledge Representation. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 447 pp. Radden, Günter and Klaus-Uwe Panther (eds.) 2004. Studies in Linguistic Motivation. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 389 pp. Radden, Günter, Klaus-Michael Koepcke, Thomas Berg and Peter Siemund (eds.) 2007. Aspects of Meaning Construction Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Riemer, Nick. 2005. The Semantics of Polysemy. Reading Meaning in English and Warlpiri. XVI. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 487 pp. Ruiz de Mendoza Ibáñez, Francisco José (ed.) 2006. Annual Review of Cognitive Linguistics. Volume 4. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Ruiz de Mendoza Ibáñez, Francisco J. / Peña Cervel, M. Sandra (eds.) 2005. Cognitive Linguistics. Internal Dynamics and Interdisciplinary Interaction. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 432 pp. Saint-Dizier, Patrick (ed.) 2005. Computational Lexical Semantics. Cambridge: CUP. Schalley, Andrea C., Dietmar Zaefferer (Eds.) Ontolinguistics. How Ontological Status Shapes the Linguistic Coding of Concepts. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Schlesinger, Izchak M. 2006. Cognitive Space and Linguistic Case. Semantic and Syntactic Categories in English. Cambridge: CUP. Schlüter, Julia. 2005. Rhythmic Grammar. The Influence of Rhythm on Grammatical Variation and Change in English. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. xi, 393 pages. Schwarz-Friesel, Monica et al. (eds.) 2007. Anaphors in Text. Cognitive, formal, and applied approaches to anaphoric reference. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Semino, Elena and Jonathan Culpeper (eds.) 2002. Cognitive Stylistics. Language and cognition in text analysis. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 333 pp. Steube, Anita. 2004. Information Structure. Theoretical and Empirical Aspects. XXII. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 360 pp. Stukker, Ninke. 2005. Causality markers across levels of language structure. A cognitive semantic analysis of causal verbs and causal connectives in Dutch. Ph.D. Dissertation, Utrecht institute of Linguistics OTS, Utrecht University. 297 pp. Keywords: causality marking, causal connectives, causative verbs, conceptual models, prototype structure, usage-based, converging evidence Tallerman, Maggie. 2005. Language Origins. Perspectives on Evolution. Oxford: OUP. 446 pp. Trautwein, Martin. 2004. The Time Window of Language. The Interaction between Linguistic and Non-Linguistic Knowledge in the Temporal Interpretation of German and English Texts. XXII. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 387 pp. Travis, Catherine E. 2005. Discourse Markers in Colombian Spanish. A Study in Polysemy. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 327 pp. Turewicz, Kamila (ed.) 2005. Cognitive Linguistics - A user-friendly approach. Szczecin: Szczecin University Press. 128 pp. Key words: metaphor and metonymy, vantage theory, complex sentence, cognitive grammar, tense and aspect, discourse, subjectification, polysemy of prepositions. Tyler, Andrea and Vyv Evans. 2003. The Semantics of English Prepositions. Spatial Scenes, Embodied Meaning, and Cognition. Cambridge: CUP. V. Dam, Helle, Jan Engberg, Heidrun Gerzymisch-Arbogast (eds.) 2005. Knowledge Systems and Translation. (Text, Translation, Computational Processing [TTCP] 7) Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 325 pp. Velasco Sacristan, Maria Sol. 2005. Metafora y Genero: Las Metaforas de Genero en la Publicidad de British Cosmopolitan. Universidad de Valladolid. Vogel, Anna. 2004. Swedish Dimensional Adjectives. Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell International. 377 pp. Key words: dimensional adjectives, semantics, Swedish, spatial, antonymy, prototype theory, polysemy, corpus-based, elicitation tests Wierzbicka, Anna. 2006. English. Meaning and Culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Updated 23 Sept 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[43]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/proposals.shtml","2007-10-05","14K","Guidelines for Proposals to Host an ICLC    ","",""," Guidelines for Proposals to Host an ICLC International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Policies and Procedures : ICLC Hosting Proposals Proposals for Hosting the ICLC: Guidelines and Procedures The ICLA welcomes proposals for hosting ICLC Meetings. To make ICLCs successful and enjoyable experiences for its members, the following guidelines for preparing proposals and for general conference organization should be followed. Guidelines for Proposal Preparation Timeline for Proposals If you are interested in hosting an International Cognitive Linguistics Conference, it is necessary to start preparations several years in advance. A well-prepared proposal will take some time to put together, and must be submitted well before the target year. Presentation of a proposal must take place a bare minimum of two years before the conference date, but since there may be other proposals submitted for the same date, we suggest submission four years in advance. The proposal for the 2005 ICLC, for example, was presented at the ICLA Governing Board meeting at the conference in 2001 and was accepted at that time. The conference typically takes place in the second half of July and lasts one week. The precise dates of the conference are to be discussed with and approved by the Governing Board. Information to be Included in the Proposal The following are some important considerations to take into account when preparing a proposal. There is no prescribed format, but the proposal should look professional and be as thorough as possible in addressing the issues that the ICLA will take into consideration when deciding among proposals. The more detail the proposal contains about local facilities, costs, and local or other support, the better it can be assessed. The main concerns to be addressed in the proposal are the following: What are the available local facilities? Can a conference of about 400-500 people be held comfortably and efficiently? Are there rooms of the requisite sizes for plenary talks, regular and theme sessions, poster sessions, book exhibits? Are rooms equipped for Powerpoint presentations? Are there conference rooms available for meetings of various types? Places for receptions and breaks with refreshments? Sufficient restrooms, with janitorial service? Given that the conference takes place in high summer, if the conference takes place in a climate with hot summers, are the facilities air conditioned? How far in advance must the facilities be reserved? Do the organizers know they can secure them (and afford the cost)? Is there enough support locally to run the conference? Or if not locally, are there enough ICLA members in the vicinity who are willing to form an organizing committee and be on site to make things run smoothly? Who will be the main organizer(s) heading the committee? Is there sufficient local assistance available such as student helpers and/or secretarial assistants to run a complex abstract selection process as well as on-site logistics? Is an experienced person available to set up an efficient registration procedure that will run smoothly with large numbers of people? Is there a secure system available to the organizers for handling preregistration fees remotely? Can cash be handled safely on-site? Can the organizers accommodate preregistrants and on-site registrants from countries with different banking and payment practices? Will a conference service be used to handle some aspects of the organization, and if so, which aspects? Conference services can save the organizers time, but their greatest disadvantage is the cost. Such services do not differentiate between groups based on different subject areas, and tend to set their charges based on what rich groups with significant funding can pay, such as medical or science organizations. The ICLA would like to discourage extensive reliance on conference services, since this can double or triple the cost of registration. Organizers should think carefully about the best use of such services. For example, a conference service might be necessary for registration, but not hotel bookings. Conference services are often not cost effective for handling hotel registrations, as many such services take a large commission for each room booked. The ICLA is a nonprofit organization and we wish to discourage the use of organizations that make a private profit from our members. Is the site of general interest? Are there enough nearby tourist attractions? What are some possibilities for organized excursions that can be incorporated into the conference on the traditional excursion day? Members are more likely to be willing to bear the expense of a conference trip if it is someplace they want to visit. What are the suggested dates of the conference? Are there other any major conferences scheduled at that time that ICLA members would attend in significant numbers? (The final dates of the conference are to be determined by agreement with the Governing Board.) Considering the fact that travel cost is usually a major issue when members are deciding whether to attend the conference, the geographical location is important. Ideally the site should be accessible rather easily to a great number of ICLA members. Is the site reasonably accessible from a major airport? Is other transport available? Does the site have enough room for accommodation at the time of year, and is such accommodation found at a reasonable price? Are there any competing events to be taken account of during the proposed conference dates that would affect room availability, e.g. major sports events, tourist events, or large conventions? There should be a range of accommodations available at various price levels, ideally including dormitory accommodation. Are the available conference hotels easily accessible to the conference site? What is the proposed schedule of registration fees? Will ICLA members, particularly student members, be able to afford the conference, i.e., are the conference fees in line with what ICLA members pay for other international conferences they attend? Similarly for non-members, as in past years large numbers of non-members have attended the conference as well. In recent years, the registration fees have been going up faster than the ability of many participants to pay them, and this hurts the organization. Organizers should pay careful attention to setting the lowest price possible. The ICLA board should be kept apprised of any changes in the fee schedule during the progress of organization. Approximately how large is the budget anticipated? A rough outline budget with any available information on projected income or expenses would be useful to the Board in considering a proposal. Are there any potential sources of support that the prospective organizers plan to apply to for funding? List all funding sources to which application will be made. Keep in mind that not only should university support be sought, but also support from other entities such as government ministries, academies of science, granting agencies, foundations, and, within reason, other private sponsors, including business. The aim is to keep registration fees as affordable as possible and also to provide as much support as can be obtained for registration waivers for members needing them, sign language interpreting, and even small travel stipends if enough funding can be found. Are the organizers willing to accommodate special populations such as deaf ICLA members, who require sign language interpreting? How? Are there any other considerations that make the proposed conference site desirable as a meeting place for the ICLC? Are there any ideas or innovations that the organizers would like to propose regarding the conference organization, program, or conference activities?     ");
array_files[44]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/webmaster.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Webmaster contact    ","",""," Webmaster contact International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Webmaster contact ICLA website information Web hosting The ICLA website has been hosted in the Department of Linguistics at Rice University since the Fall of 2003. From 2002 to 2003 it was hosted at the University of New Mexico at Albuquerque. The present site was designed by Dan Parvaz (formerly of UNM) in 2002. ICLA holds the copyright to the site design and all text hosted on the site. Earlier ICLA sites were hosted at the University of Groningen and at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. Site admin contact information ICLA Webmaster: Suzanne Kemmer (kemmer AT rice.edu) Web Editor / Book Review Editor: Martin Hilpert (hilpert AT icsi.berkeley.edu) Web Assistant: Sarah Lee (sarah.lee AT rice.edu) | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[45]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/confreport2005.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","Final Report on the ICLC 9 Conference, 2005, Yonsei University, Korea    ","",""," Final Report on the ICLC 9 Conference, 2005, Yonsei University, Korea International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Final Conference Reports : 2005 Conference Report 2001 Final Conference Report The Final Report of the 9th International Cognitive Linguistics Conference. Planning Organizing committee: Advisory committee: Administration: Presentations Plenary speakers: Featured speakers: Regular papers: Theme sessions: Posters: Abstracts submitted: Total presentations: Participants [registered participants (early/late registration)] Students: Members: Non-members: Waived by Organizers: Total: Financial Total budget: (includes money collected for lodging, meals, excursions, etc.) Planning budget: (for matters within the purview of the organizing committee) Income: --Registration fees: --Publisher donations (Benjamins, Mouton de Gruyter): --Exhibit fees: --UCSD donation: --Participant donations: --Book sales: --ICLA (for financial aid): Total: Total costs: Surplus: (returned to ICLA as contribution to fund for sign language interpreting at future meetings) | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[46]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/confreport2003.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","Final Report on the ICLC 8 Conference, 2003, Logrono    ","",""," Final Report on the ICLC 8 Conference, 2003, Logrono International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Final Conference Reports : 2003 Conference Report Final Conference Report ICLC 8, 2003 The Final Report of the 8th International Cognitive Linguistics Conference. The Conference took place at the University of La Rioja, July 20-25, 2003, in Logrono, Spain. Planning Head Organizer: Francisco J. Ruiz de Mendoza Ibanez, University of La Rioja. Local Organizing Committee: Advisory committee: Administration: CPresentations Plenary speakers: Regular papers: Theme sessions: Posters: Abstracts submitted: Total presentations: Participants [registered participants (early/late registration)] Student Members: Student Non-Members: Non-Student Members: Waived by organizers: Total: Financial Total budget: Planning budget: (for matters within the purview of the organizing committee) Income: --Registration fees: --Publisher donations (Benjamins, Mouton de Gruyter): 3,000 --Exhibit fees: 2,000 --UCSD donation: 2,000 --Participant donations: 400 --Book sales: 2,000 --ICLA (for financial aid): 3,000 Total: 58,000 Total costs: 55,000 Surplus: 3,000 (returned to ICLA as contribution to fund for sign language interpreting at future meetings) ! | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[47]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/confreport2001.shtml","2007-10-05","6K","Final Report on the ICLC 7 Conference, 2001, UC Santa Barbara    ","",""," Final Report on the ICLC 7 Conference, 2001, UC Santa Barbara International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Final Conference Reports : 2001 Conference Report 2001 Final Conference Report The Final Report of the 7th International Cognitive Linguistics Conference. The meetings were held July 22-27, 2001, at the University of California, Santa Barbara, in conjunction with the LSA Summer Institute. Planning Organizing committee: Ron Langacker, Michel Achard, Suzanne Kemmer, Eve Sweetser, Sherman Wilcox Advisory committee: Wallace Chafe, Jack DuBois, Bob Kirsner, Jo Rubba Administration: UCSB Campus Conference Services (Sally Vito, Miki Swick) Presentations Plenary speakers: Sandy Thompson, Arie Verhagen, Laura Janda, Yoshihiko Ikegami, Sherman Wilcox Featured speakers: George Lakoff, Gilles Fauconnier, Eve Sweetser, Len Talmy, Knud Lambrecht, David Tuggy, Adele Goldberg, Ron Langacker Regular papers: 181 (5 parallel sessions) Theme sessions: 9 (62 presentations) Posters: 30 Regular session abstracts submitted: 331 Total presentations: 256 (+ 30 posters) Participants [registered participants (early/late registration)] Students: (70/90) 66/32 = 98 Members: (145/170) 68/25 = 93 Non-members: (170/195) 68/36 = 104 LSA Institute discounted price: (30 limited/75 full week) 68/45 = 113 Nonpaying (fee waived by organizers): 50 Total: 458 Financial [figures rounded off and approximate] Total budget: 87,000 (includes money collected for lodging, meals, excursions, etc.) Planning budget: 58,000 (for matters within the purview of the organizing committee) Income: --Registration fees: 45,600 --Publisher donations (Benjamins, Mouton de Gruyter): 3,000 --Exhibit fees: 2,000 --UCSD donation: 2,000 --Participant donations: 400 --Book sales: 2,000 --ICLA (for financial aid): 3,000 Total: 58,000 Total costs: 55,000 Surplus: 3,000 (returned to ICLA as contribution to fund for sign language interpreting at future meetings) Final Report submitted by Ronald Langacker to the Governing Board at ICLC 8, Logroño, July 22, 2003. | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[48]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/board0507.shtml","2007-10-05","6K","ICLA Governing Board July 2005-2007    ","",""," ICLA Governing Board July 2005-2007 International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Governing Board 2005-7 ICLA Governing BoardJuly 2005-July 2007 Officers President Klaus-Uwe Panther Universität Hamburg Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik Von-Melle-Park 6 D-20146 Hamburg Germany Phone: +49-(0)40-42838-5972 Fax: +49-(0)40-42838-4856 panther AT uni-hamburg.de Secretary/Treasurer Ad Foolen Department of Linguistics Radboud University Nijmegen P.O. Box 9103 NL-6500 HD Nijmegen The Netherlands Tel: +31243237037 Fax: +313611070 a.foolen AT let.ru.nl Regular members Hubert Cuyckens Dept. of Linguistics University of Leuven Blijde-Inkomststraat 21 B-3000 Leuven Belgium Tel: +32-16-324817 Fax: +32-16324767 hubert.cuyckens AT arts.kuleuven.be Jeong-Hwa Lee Korea Digital University Dept. of Foreign Languages 4F, 190-3 Chungjeongno 2-ga, Seodaemun-gu, SEOUL 120-012 KOREA TEL. 82-2-390-4230 FAX. 82-2-390-4210 jeonglee12 AT hotmail.com David Tuggy a/c Instituto Lingüístico de Verano Apdo. 22067 14000 México, D.F. México 5573-2024 david_tuggy AT sil.org www.sil.org/~tuggyd Ex-officio members Editor in Chief, Cognitive Linguistics Until December 31, 2006: Adele Goldberg Program in Linguistics Princeton University 029 East Pyne Princeton University Princeton, NJ 08544 U.S.A. adele AT princeton.edu As of January 1, 2007: Ewa Dabrowska School of English Department of Linguistics University of Sheffield Sheffield S10 2TN UK e.dabrowska AT sheffield.ac.uk Past President Suzanne Kemmer Department of Linguistics, MS 23 Rice University P.O. Box 1892 Houston TX 77251-1892 U.S.A. Tel. (713) 348-6225 kemmer AT rice.edu Representative of ICLC 10 2007 (Krakow/Cracow) Organizing CommitteeElzbieta Tabakowska Governing Board 2001-2003 Governing Board 2003-2005 Governing Board 2005-2007 Governing Board 2007-2009(Current Board) Updated 27 July 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[49]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/boardmtg2005.shtml","2007-10-05","24K","Report on the Meetings of the ICLA Governing Board, Cognitive Linguistics Editorial Board, and General Assembly, July 2005    ","",""," Report on the Meetings of the ICLA Governing Board, Cognitive Linguistics Editorial Board, and General Assembly, July 2005 International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Meeting Reports : 2005 Meeting Reports 2005 Meeting Reports ICLA Governing Board and CL Editorial Board Meeting (held jointly); ICLA Business Meeting of the General Assembly; and Conference Closing Meeting/Ceremony, ICLC 9, Seoul, Korea, July 2005 1. Report on the ICLA Governing Board Meeting/CL Editorial Board Meeting Date/time: Tuesday July 19, 2005, 6.30 p.m. Location: Room Chung-Song, Allen Hall, Yonsei University, Seoul Present at the Governing Board and Editorial Board Meeting: - Governing Board members: Suzanne Kemmer (President), Ad Foolen (Secretary/Treasurer), Laura Janda (Regular Member), Klaus-Uwe Panther (Regular Member), Sally Rice (Regular Member), Dirk Geeraerts (most recent Past President), Kee Dong Lee (ex-offico member, Representative of the ICLC 9 Organizing Committee). Absent: Adele Goldberg (ex-officio member, CL Journal Editor). - By invitation of the President: Anke Beck (CL Publisher, also representing CL Editor Adele Goldberg), Ron Langacker (advisory for various items), Hyon-Sook Shin and Ki-Sun Hong (for item 3 on ICLC 9), Barbara Lewandowska-Tomaszczyk (for item 4 on ICLC 10), Thomas Li and Eve Sweetser (for item 5 on ICLC 11, 2009), Sherman Wilcox (for item 6 Sign Language Interpreting). Items of Business Supper - At 6.30 p.m. a Supper was served for the ICLA Governing Board and guests. Call to order of ICLA Governing Board - Suzanne Kemmer Minutes from ICLC 8, Logroño. - The Board approved the minutes of the Board Meeting and the Business Meeting of ICLC 8, Logroño, from 2003. [Posted at Meeting Reports 2003.] Report on ICLC 9, Seoul - Hyon-Sook Shin (Chair of the ICLC 9 Organizing Committee), along with Ki-Sun Hong, presented the report. The total attendance was 405 (as of July 19th): 335 paying participants, 10 invited speakers, 60 volunteers. The total income was 65,500. ICLC 9 received 5,000 from ICLA for financial support of student participants. 33 students were awarded a travel grant of 150 each. (The full conference financial report can be checked with the Secretary). The President thanked the Organizers for their wonderfully well-run conference. The Board thanked them also for providing the delicious Korean buffet for supper. Report on progress of ICLC 10, 2007, Cracow - Barbara Lewandowska-Tomaszczyk distributed a flyer for ICLC 10. The conference will take place 15-20 July, 2007, in Cracow (Kraków), Poland. The Conference Chair will be Professor Elzbieta Tabakowska. The organizers are already working on questions of accommodation and renting the main conference hall. Plenary talks will take place at a location five minutes walk from that of the general/theme session talks. The extra time needed to switch between locations will have to be worked into the conference schedule. The website of ICLC 10 can be reached here . Proposals for ICLC 11, 2009 - Two proposals were presented, one by Thomas Li (Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics) and one by Eve Sweetser (University of California at Berkeley). UCB will host the Linguistic Society of America Institute in summer 2009, which is considered by the Board as a strong point in favor of Berkeley. Moreover, the principle of alternating between continents would also speak for an American location. Nevertheless the Chinese location sounded attractive, since from the Chinese side it would strengthen the development of Cognitive Linguistics in China, and from the point of view of non-Chinese ICLA members, would provide an interesting and, for many, new destination. After discussion, the Board decided to hold ICLC 11 at U.C. Berkeley. Given the positives in the proposal by Thomas Li, it was decided to put the Beijing proposal on the list of proposals for 2011. It was suggested that in the meantime, the Chinese Cognitive Linguistics Association register an affiliate member of ICLA to strengthen the bid for Beijing as a host in 2011. The Board also decided that it would not make decisions on future locations more than 4 years in advance, to avoid locking up the selection before other potential proposals for a distant year could be prepared. (Eve Sweetser and Thomas Li left the meeting). [Added to the ICLA Policies and Procedures in September 2005 by the Webmaster.] Sign Language Interpreting Fund - Sherman Wilcox reported that ICLC 8 in Logroño in 2003 provided one full-time sign language interpreter as well as several ad hoc interpreters who were also linguists attending the conference. For the present conference, US3890 was spent to cover some of the expenses for 2 interpreters, one full-time and one part-time; for conference registrations for volunteer ASL interpreters; for KSL interpreters hired by the organizers; and for a scholarship for a deaf student who received matching funds from her department (UNM). ICLA was prepared to provide a guarantee fund of 5000, in accordance with the motion made by Ron Langacker in Logroño to set aside this amount into the Sign Language Interpreting Fund established after the Santa Barbara conference. But, in accordance with ICLAs request, the organizers helped conserve the Sign Language Fund by building some costs into the fee structure. ICLC 9 reserved 10 per registrant for ASL/KSL expenses (8 for ASL, 2 for KSL) out of the conference registration fee, so that in fact, about 2/3 of the expenses were paid for right at the conference by the cash funds provided by ICLC 9. However, as the amount did not cover all the expenses, 600 for the part-time interpreter and 500 for the scholarship came out of the ICLA American account after the conference was over. The net expense to ICLA was therefore 1100. The remainder of the 5000 interpreting fund, 3900, will remain for use as a guarantee fund for Sign Language Interpreting in Cracow. The amount spent, 3890, was relatively little because the interpreters did not actually charge for hourly interpreting. They did the job essentially pro bono, and with only a partial reimbursement of their expenses. The full-time interpreter received airfare of about 1500 and registration; the part-time interpreter received hotel and a few other expenses, totaling 600, plus registration; and the other, ad hoc interpreters received only the conference registration reimbursement. Sherman warned that in the future, the effective per-hour costs of interpreting would rise since we could not count on this pro bono work to continue. The Board advised the organizers of ICLC 10 to ask the European Science Foundation (ESF) for financial support for interpreting. A contribution for sign language interpretation should also be built into future conference participation fees, as the Seoul organizers did, or, as an addition or alternative, participants could opt for adding a donation to the regular fee. The Board decided to nominate a committee which will act as a point of contact for future conference organizers. It was proposed that Paul Dudis (Gallaudet) be asked to be chair of this committee. Sherman Wilcox agreed to be a member, and Ad Foolen, as Treasurer, was willing to be a member as well. It was suggested that Paul select a few other members to work with him as needed. Regular Business Secretary/Treasurers report Ad Foolen took over as Acting Secretary/Treasurer from Marjolijn Verspoor as of January 1, 2005. Marjolijn resigned due to other obligations. The President thanked Marjolijn for all the work she had done in the many years she was Secretary/Treasurer, and the Board added its thanks. Ad reported that the number of paying members rose from 344 to 358 in the past half year. Anke proposed that a new brochure on ICLA should be made, which could be distributed via other journals etc. and the Linguist List, to attract new members. ICLA has two accounts, one in Europe and one in the US. The latter was held for many years in the name of Margaret Winters, but she could not continue with the position of American Treasurer. The account was transferred to Suzanne Kemmer in June 2005. Outstanding reimbursements due to Suzanne Kemmer and Eve Sweetser for air travel to ICLC6 in Stockholm were settled from the American account. The European account now has €11.707 (the 5,000 for ICLC 9 already deducted), and the American account has 4,573.50. Anke suggested that, in the future, ICLA might consider maintaining the member list, which to date has been handled by Mouton at the cost of 12 per member. The work would probably fall to the Secretary/Treasurer or a hired assistant. No decision was taken on this point. Editors report - The Editor of Cognitive Linguistics, Adele Goldberg, could not be present at the Board Meeting because she was teaching at the LSA Institute at MIT. Anke presented a letter written by Adele in which she informed the Board that she will step down as of January 1, 2007. The main reason for this decision is that her new employer, Princeton University, does not support major editorial activities by its faculty. Moreover, her Editorial Assistant, Devin Casenhiser, moved to a busy job at York University. The Board proposed that, in accordance with the procedure for Editor Selection adopted in Santa Barbara, the President and the Editor search for a new editor, in consultation with the publisher. An Advisory Committee was nominated to assist the search process, consisting of Dirk Geeraerts, Arie Verhagen and Suzanne Kemmer. Anke presented an overview of the marketing of the journal by Mouton de Gruyter. The number of pages of the journal will be established at 600 pages, and members and institutions will receive the Cognitive Linguistics Bibliography CD compiled by Hans-Georg Wolf, René Dirven, Rong Chen, Ning Yu, and Birgit Smeja. The CD will be sent out each year, together with the first issue of Cognitive Linguistics. These additional benefits justify a raise of the membership fee. The Board agreed, after discussions with Anke, that from 2006 onward regular members would pay €65,00 (was €60,00), and student members €37,00 (was 32,95). Mouton also plans to raise the institutional subscription cost from 2006. Role of Board Members - The President suggested that the role of the Board Members be specified more explicitly, including the role of the American Treasurer and the Webmaster. She presented a document outlining the Board roles and also some non-Board roles for people serving the ICLA. Specifying the roles could be done either by means of an amendment to the Constitution, or as a simple statement under the ICLA Policies and Procedures. This suggestion and discussion of how to handle such a specification procedurally was passed on to the new Board. The document will be sent to the new Board after the conference when the President is ready to deal with the issue. Requests for affiliation - The application of the German affiliate organization DGKL/GCLA had been approved already via e-mail voting earlier in 2005. Four more organizations have sent in requests for affiliation: -AFLiCo, Association Française de Linguistique Cognitive (President: Maarten Lemmens) -JCLA, Japanese Cognitive Linguistics Association (President: Yoshihiko Ikegami) -DISCOG, The Discourse and Cognitive Linguistics Society of Korea (President: Jiryong Lim) -CSDLA, Conceptual Structure, Discourse, and Language Association (President: Sally Rice) AFLiCo is a new organization formed at the Bordeaux conference in May 2005. CSDLA is a new organization officially, but has been informally active since 1993 in the form of the group running the well-known CSDL conferences. The JCLA and DISCOG have existed for a few years and have run conferences, but are now applying for ICLA affiliation for the first time. The application documents can be checked with the Secretary. The Board approved all four applications. Anke expressed concerns about the increase in affiliate organizations, which, in her view, might lead to a decrease in overall membership of ICLA. Suzanne stressed that affiliate organizations could enlarge the basis of Cognitive Linguistics (through courses, summer schools, and biennial meetings alternating with ICLC) and can encourage their membership to become ICLA members. [Post-conference note: it is also part of the Constitution of the ICLA to foster and promote affiliate organizations; see Article 4 of the Constitution.] Donations - The President reported that Gary Palmer and Debra Occhi donated the royalties of their book Languages of Sentiment to ICLA. She encouraged the Board members to publicize the possibility of donations in their academic circles and to consider donating royalties from their edited books to the ICLA. A page on the ICLA website has been created to publicize the possibility of supporting the ICLA through donations. It can also serve to publicize the books of the members donating their royalties. Conference organization: Guidelines booklet - The President suggested that a timeline and a task list for conference organization be added. She volunteered to provide drafts from her own organization materials. Her draft document Guidelines and Expectations for ICLC Organization and its Aftermath, started after Logroño with suggestions from several Board Members, was provided to the Korean organizers and proved useful. The document has now grown to 15 pages with incorporation of suggestions based on the feedback from the Korean as well as the Spanish conference, and should provide a good basis for future conferences. It will be passed on to the Polish organizers after the Seoul conference. [The document was sent to Elzbieta Tabakowska, head organizer of ICLC 10, in late 2005.] Election 2005 - The President solicited suggestions for election nominees. Klaus-Uwe Panther and Arie Verhagen were suggested as nominees for President; Ad Foolen was suggested as nominee for Secretary/Treasurer (4 year term), and the following were suggested as Regular Board Members: Sherman Wilcox, David Tuggy, Francisco Ruiz de Mendoza, Jeong-Hwa Lee, Maarten Lemmens, John Newman, and Yo Matsumoto. Adjournment - The President adjourned the meeting at 11.15 pm. 2. Report on the ICLA Business Meeting of the General Assembly of ICLA Date/time: Tuesday July 21, 2005, 6.30-7.30 p.m. Location: Room B130 in the College of Business & Economics, Yonsei University, Seoul Attendance: ca. 60 Items of Business Call to order by the President, Suzanne Kemmer Reports by the President - Suzanne Kemmer reported that ICLC 9 was attended by 405 participants. ICLC 10 will take place in Cracow (Kraków), Poland in 2007, July 15-20, 2006, and ICLC 11 in 2009 will be held at U.C. Berkeley in the United States. Beijing is a candidate for 2011 (Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, BUAA, PRC). Other proposals for ICLC 12 in 2011 must be sent in to the Secretary/Treasurer before the meeting in Cracow. - About the journal: the number of pages will be established at 600 pages. The editor, Adele Golberg, is stepping down as of January 1, 2007. Suggestions for a new editor can be sent to the Secretary/Treasurer, who will pass them to the Board. The membership fee will be raised to €65 (regular members) and €37 (students). The fee includes the new Cognitive Linguistics Bibliography, CogBib, on CD, which will come with the subscription to Cognitive Linguistics. The increase in pages and the Bibliography CD will enhance the value of the subscription. - Four new affiliate organizations, all regional, have been accepted (AFLiCo, France; DISCOG, Korea; JCLA, Japan, and CSDLA, North America), which brings the total number of affiliate organizations to 10. - The website is based at Rice University, with Suzanne Kemmer as Webmaster, together with Martin Hilpert, who is serving as Web Editor. The President invited members to send in books for review or write a review of a book for the ICLA website. See the instructions for prospective reviewers and for those who would like to make their books available for review on the ICLA book review page. - The President thanked Gary Palmer and Debra Occhi for generously donating the royalties of their book Languages of Sentiment, and Mouton de Gruyter for donating the yield of the silent book auction at ICLC 9. The Mouton donation, appropriately, goes to the Sign Language Interpreting Fund of the ICLA. Report by the Acting Secretary/Treasurer - Ad Foolen reported that the total number of paying individual members is 358 (not including some new members from the weeks preceding the conference). The top 10 by country: 1. Japan 72, 2. USA, 71, 3. Germany 31, 4. Spain 19, 5. Great Britain 18, 6. Korea 16, 7. Netherlands 16, 8. France 10, 9. Belgium 10, 10. Australia 9. (The numbers for the other countries: Argentina 2, Austria 2, Brazil 1, Canada 6, China 2, Croatia 6, Denmark 4, Estonia 1, Finland 7, Greece 7, Hungary 1, Ireland 1, Israel 2, Italy 2, Latvia 1, Lithuania 1, Malaysia 1, Mexico 2, New Zealand 2, Norway 7, Peru 1, Philippines 1, Poland 6, Portugal 2, Romania 1, Sweden 8, Switzerland 1, Slovenia 3, South Africa 1, Taiwan 3, Thailand 1.) Elections - Ex-officio members of the new Board will be: Elzbieta Tabakowska as Chair of ICLC 10, Adele Goldberg as Editor of CL, Suzanne Kemmer as Past President. The President took nominations for the other functions and subsequently voting took place. The names of the proposed candidates and votes are as follows: President: Klaus-Uwe Panther30Elected Arie Verhagen26 Secretary/Treasurer: Ad Foolen53Elected Regular members: Jeong-Hwa Lee (Korea)28Elected John Newman (Canada)21 Francisco Ruiz de Mendoza (Spain) 10 Hubert Cuyckens (Belgium)23Elected Anatol Stefanowitsch (Germany)15 David Tuggy (USA)23Elected Yo Matsumoto (Japan)16 Sherman Wilcox (USA)20 Maarten Lemmens (France) 15 The new Governing Board will begin its term immediately after the ICLC 9 conferences is over. Adjournment - The President, Suzanne Kemmer, adjourned the meeting at 7:30 p.m. 3. Closing Ceremony The closing ceremony of ICLC 2005 was held on Friday July 22 at 3:00 p.m. The Conference Chair, Hyon-Sook Shin, graciously thanked the ICLA and the many colleagues who helped her run the conference. The outgoing President, Suzanne Kemmer, expressed deep appreciation on behalf of the ICLA to each of the helpers, organizers, and the Conference Chair for all their work. Then the new President, Klaus-Uwe Panther, gave an address, in which he thanked Suzanne Kemmer for her work in the 4 years of her presidency. Suzanne was given a standing ovation. The new President also thanked the Conference Chair and the organizers of the Seoul conference for the magnificent job they had done. Finally, he invited everybody to meet again in two years in Cracow. Draft of meeting reports submitted by Ad Foolen August 17, 2005. Amended by Klaus-Uwe Panther, Suzanne Kemmer, and Ad Foolen. Final version submitted by Ad Foolen December 14, 2005. Approved by ICLA Governing Board August 15, 2006. | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[50]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/boardmtg2003.shtml","2007-10-05","18K","Report on the Meetings of the ICLA Governing Board, Cognitive Linguistics Editorial Board, and General Assembly, July 2003    ","",""," Report on the Meetings of the ICLA Governing Board, Cognitive Linguistics Editorial Board, and General Assembly, July 2003 International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Meeting Reports : 2003 Meeting Reports 2003 Meeting Reports ICLA Governing Board and CL Editorial Board Meetings, ICLC 8, July 2003 A report on the ICLA Governing Board Meeting, held jointly with the meeting of the Cognitive Linguistics Editorial Board. Date/time: Tuesday July 22, 2003, 16.00 hours Location: The Meeting Room (Sala de Juntas) in the Quintiliano Building, University of La Rioja, Logroño Present at the Governing Board and Editorial Board Meeting: The Governing Board: Suzanne Kemmer, President; Marjolijn Verspoor, Sectretary/Treasurer; Dirk Geeraerts, Past President; Kee Dong Lee, Regular Board Member; Ron Langacker, Regular Board Member; Sally Rice, Regular Board Member; Francisco J. Ruiz de Mendoza Ibañez, Representative of Organizing Committee for ICLC 8, 2003, in Logroño; Arie Verhagen, Editor of Cognitive Linguistics; Adele Goldberg, incoming Editor of Cognitive Linguistics; and Anke Beck, Editor in Chief, Mouton de Gruyter. Items of Business Call to order of ICLA Governing Board - Suzanne Kemmer Presentation of the Report of the 2001 meetings, Santa Barbara. Approved by the Board. [Later posted at Meeting Reports 2001.] Cognitive Linguistics Editorial Board meeting agenda Editors report - Arie Verhagen. It was announced that Arie would remain Editor in Chief until the backlog of papers on which he has begun the editing process has appeared in the journal. This might take a year or more. Publishers Report: membership and journals financial report - Anke Beck Discussion of past achievements and general future goals for journal - Anke Beck and Arie Verhagen Introduction of the Editor-Elect; her vision for the journal, new proposals, and goals - Adele Goldberg Governing Board discussion of editor and publisher proposals Adjournment of Editorial Board meeting Refreshment Break Reports on past 2 years business Secretary/Treasurers financial report - Marjolijn Verspoor The Association has 6706.13 in the American account and &euro;8590.21 in the European account. ICLC 7 (2001) Final Conference Report - Ron Langacker reported on the Santa Barbara ICLC. The conference was solvent and was able to turn 3000 over to the ICLC accounts. It was suggested after the 2001 conference by some Board Members to start a Sign Language Interpreting fund with this money. Ron Langacker proposed, given this suggestion and the accumulated money in the ICLA accounts reported by Marjolijn, that the Governing Board recommend to the Assembly that 5000 be used for Sign Language Interpreting expenses at the next conference. The Board supported the recommendation. ICLC 8 (2003): current conference news and announcements - Francisco Ruiz. Suzanne Kemmer, on behalf of the Board, thanked Paco for his tremendous efforts in putting on the largest ICLC ever. The ICLA is grateful to him for taking on this task and bringing it off successfully. ICLC 9 (2005), Seoul, South Korea : news on conference plans and progress - Kee Dong Lee. ICLA Website - Suzanne Kemmer After ICLC 7 in 2001, the domain names cogling.org and cognitivelinguistics.org were secured, with the idea that even if the website moved, the domain names would remain the same. A new website was designed by Dan Parvaz of the University of New Mexico, and came online in 2002. In Spring 2003, Dan designed a webform that would allow new members to automatically generate a membership form and fax it to Mouton with their credit card information. A useful feature is that a copy of the membership form (without credit card info) is automatically sent by email to the publisher and the secretary of the organization. Marjolijn reported that memberships began to be submitted as soon as the web form was activated, and submissions continue at a good pace. Suzanne reported that the volunteers for the positions of Webmaster and Web Editor that we got in 2001 (see 2001 Report) have stepped down. Dan Parvaz recently accepted a job and is unable to continue as Webmaster. The site has been moved to Rice and Suzanne has been acting as Webmaster, at least for the interim. Anatol Stefanowitsch served in an advisory role on the website creation through spring 2002, but did not choose to continue as web editor subsequently. It seems there were some misunderstandings about the precise responsibilities of that position and its relation to the board. [Post-conference: Suzanne located a graduate student at Rice, Martin Hilpert, who is willing to take on the tasks of updating the site and helping to expand it with information from members. Suzanne will continue to act as Webmaster and Martin will serve as Web Editor, dealing with expansion of content and formatting issues in consultation with Suzanne.] Proposals for ICLC 10 Proposal #1 - Barbara Lewandowska-Tomaszczyk. The Polish CLA proposes to host ICLC 9 in 2007 in Krakow, Poland. The Board was enthusiastic about the conference being hosted in Poland, by organizers who had done so much to get Cognitive Linguistics a foothold in Europe. It was noted that Poland had probably the oldest and one of the most active Cognitive Linguistics communities in Europe, so it was felt appropriate that the PCLA should have the opportunity to host an ICLC. Possibility #2 - Suzanne Kemmer reported news from Eve Sweetser that the LSA Institute was likely to be held in Boulder in Summer 2007. The Board discussed the issue of whether the proposal on the table should be submitted without reservation to the Assembly for 2007, or whether the Board should wait to see if a proposal from Boulder would be forthcoming soon. The Board was of differing opinions on this matter. Some urged that we should only consider proposals submitted at this conference. They felt that the Polish one was excellent and the organizers requested year should be honored in submitting the proposal to the Assembly. Others worried about the ICLC remaining away from the U.S. for too long, at least 8 years in the case that the 2007 conference was held in Krakow. The importance of to the Cognitive Community in the U.S. of linking the ICLC conference to LSA Institutes was emphasized. In the end it was decided to submit the Polish proposal to the General Assembly for approval, but without a specified year. We would then investigate immediately whether a Boulder proposal would be submitted soon. The Board would take until Christmas (at the latest) to determine whether a proposal would be submitted for consideration; if none was forthcoming, the Krakow conference would take place in 2007. If a Boulder proposal materialized during this time, the Board would consider it at that time. [Note: It was discovered that Boulder Linguistics had withdrawn their proposal to host the LSA Institute in 2007, and so the Board approved the Krakow proposal via email in October 2003.] Discussion began again about how to use the surplus funds that ICLA has acquired. Ron Langacker proposed that 5000 be dedicated to providing travel scholarships or other subsidy for conference attendance to needy participants such as students and scholars from low-currency countries. The Board approved the recommendation. There was some discussion of aspects of conference organization. Suggestions and comments on organization were made. Suzanne Kemmer agreed to draw up a set of guidelines for running and ICLC conference for future organizers. Marjolijn had already provided a list of considerations for proposed ICLC venues, some of which was relevant to conference organization, and Suzanne proposed to start from there. [A document called Proposals for Hosting the ICLC: Policies and Procedures, an expanded version of Marjolijns original guidelines, was circulated to the Board and approved in September 2003. Boardmembers suggestions for good conference organization at the meeting and during email correspondence afterwards were compiled by Suzanne in a document called ICLA Guidelines and Requirements for Conference Organization and Aftermath which was given to the Korean organizers in early 2004 and an updated version in March 2005. It can be made available to future organizers in good time for each conference.] Board recommendations for positions for the 2003-2005 Governing Board Adjournment of meeting --Submitted by Suzanne Kemmer, June 2005. Approved by Governing Board in Seoul, July 19, 2005. One small correction in wording made July 29, 2005, by Suzanne Kemmer. Report on the Business Meeting of the ICLA Assembly, ICLC 8, July 2003 Date/time: Thursday, July 24, 2003, 13.00-14.00 hours Location: Gran Aula in the Quintiliano Building, University of La Rioja, Logroño Items of Business Call to order - Suzanne Kemmer Cognitive Linguistics Journal Arie Verhagen, current Editor of the Cognitive Linguistics Journal, reported on the acceptation/rejection rates of the past two years. In the period of 2001-2003, the journal received 88 manuscripts. The general acceptance rate has been 37%, which is about the same as during the 1999-2001 period. Suzanne Kemmer announced that the ICLA Board, in consultation with Mouton de Gruyter, has appointed Adele Goldberg as Editor of the journal to succeed Arie Verhagen. Adele has gladly accepted. She will begin accepting submissions in January 2004 at her address at the University of Illinois. Secretary/Treasurers report Membership and Finances Marjolijn Verspoor, current ICLA secretary, reported on membership and finances. The ICLA now has about 262 individual members (paid subscriptions to the journal not including institutional subscribers) in 37 countries: Total EU (133) [Germany (27), Great Britain (18), Spain (17), Netherlands (13) Belgium (10), Finland (7), Sweden (7), Poland (6), Italy (5), Denmark (4), Norway (4), France (3), Greece (3), Austria (2), Portugal (2), Slowenia (2) Ireland (1) Estonia (1), Hungary (1)] Japan (47) USA (45) Australia (6) South Korea (4) Brazil (4) Canada (4) Israel (2) New Zealand (2) Russia (2) Switzerland (2). The following countries each have one member: Malaysia, Mexico, Philippines, Romania, Serbia, Russia, South Africa, and Ukraine. The Secretary/Treasurer announced the state of the ICLA bank accounts (see Governing Board meeting item 5a. above) Spending Proposals The members approved the Boards recommendation that 5000.00 will be put into a travel fund for the Seoul conference. It will be at the discretion of the Seoul Organizing Committee to award the travel scholarship funds. The Boards second recommendation, to use 5000.00 of ICLA funds to support Sign Language Interpreting at the Seoul conference, was also approved by the Assembly. ICLA Website Suzanne Kemmer, in her capacity as Webmaster, announced the new site URLs to the members as well as some plans for new content to the site. Members were urged to submit suggestions and content for the growing site. The intent is to make it the central clearing house for information about Cognitive Linguistics. Research, Conferences, Places to Study Cognitive Linguistics, and anything else pertaining to the field that we can make accessible from the site. Report ICLC 2003 Francisco Ruiz de Mendoza Ibañez reported that the current attendance of ICLC 8 is about 640. This is an attendance record for the ICLC conference. Locations of future ICLCs Suzanne Kemmer announced that as decided in Santa Barbara in 2001, the next conference in 2005 will be held at Yonsei University in Seoul, South Korea. The Polish Cognitive Linguistics Association would like to organize the 2007 conference in Krakow, but in 2007 the LSA Institute, an important American summer school with associated conferences, may be held in Boulder, a desirable venue for an ICLA conference. After a brief discussion, the members present voted to approve Krakow as a venue for either 2007 or 2009. They agreed that they will leave it up to the ICLA board to make a final decision on the year for the Krakow conference once it is clear where the American summer school will be held. [Secretarys note: Meanwhile the decision has been made to hold the 2007 conference in Krakow.] Conference Announcement Chris Sinha, a member from the floor, announced that a Cognitive conference called Language, Culture and Mind would be held in Portsmouth in Summer 2004. He was asked if the group there would evolve into a UK Cognitive Linguistics Association. The answer was unclear. Suzanne Kemmer noted that a UK affiliate of the ICLA would be very welcome. Election of board members The election was held for members of the Governing Board for the 2003-2005 term. The term begins at the end of this meeting and lasts until the end of the next conference in Seoul in July 2005. The results of the 2003 election are as follows: President: Suzanne Kemmer (re-elected); Regular members: Laura Janda; Klaus-Uwe Panther; and Sally Rice (re-elected). Marjolijn will continue her 4-year term as Secretary/Treasurer, to which she was elected in 2001, until the new election in Seoul. The ex-officio members are Arie Verhagen (CL journal editor); Dirk Geeraerts (keeping his role of most recent Past President after the re-election of Suzanne Kemmer); and Kee Dong Lee (ICLC 2005 representative of the Seoul organizing committee, changing his role from Regular Board Member in 2003). Adele Goldberg will join the Governing Board when her term as Acting Editor begins in January 2004, replacing Arie Verhagen on the Board. [The incoming 2003-05 ICLA Governing Board and their contact information was posted on the ICLA website in August 2003. Adjournment of meeting Report submitted by Marjolijn Verspoor, August 2004. Completed and posted by Suzanne Kemmer, June 2005. Approved by the ICLC Governing Board in Seoul, July 19, 2005. | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[51]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/boardmtg2001.shtml","2007-10-05","8K","Report on the Meetings of the ICLA Governing Board, Cognitive Linguistics Editorial Board, and the Business Meeting of ICLA General Assembly, July 2001.     ","",""," Report on the Meetings of the ICLA Governing Board, Cognitive Linguistics Editorial Board, and the Business Meeting of ICLA General Assembly, July 2001. International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Meeting Reports : 2001 Reports 2001 Meeting Reports Meetings of the ICLA Governing Board, Cognitive Linguistics Editorial Board, and the Business Meeting of ICLA General Assembly, July 2001 A report on the ICLA Governing Board Meeting (held jointly with the meeting of the Cognitive Linguistics editorial board) and associated actions taken at the meeting of the General Assembly at ICLC 7, UC Santa Barbara, July 22, 2001. Present at the Governing Board Meeting: Dirk Geeraerts, President; Maggie Winters, Sectretary/Treasurer; Marjolijn Verspoor, prospective Secretary/Treasurer; Ron Langacker, Past President; Suzanne Kemmer, Representative of Organizing Committee for ICLC 7; Arie Verhagen, Editor of Cognitive Linguistics; Antonio Barcelona, Regular Board Member, and Anke Beck, Editor in Chief, Mouton de Gruyter. Items of Business Venues for ICLC 2003 and 2005 Two proposals for the next upcoming ICLCs were presented. The Board recommended that ICLC 8 in 2003 be held at Logroño, Spain, and ICLC 9 in 2005 be held in Seoul, South Korea. Both recommmendations were accepted at the meeting of the General Assembly. ICLA finances The financial report for 2001 was approved. The balance in the American account was 6,536.13 and the European account NLG 54,584.59. The Secretary/Treasurer position Margaret Winters (secretary from 1999 to 2001) expressed her wish not to complete her four-year term as Secretary/Treasurer. Marjolijn Verspoor (who had filled this position previously from 1993-1999) expressed willingness to act as such for another term, comprising the four years 2001-2005. It was decided that an improved web site with appropriate domain names would improve communication between the Association and its members. At the ICLA Business Meeting, Dan Parvaz of the University of New Mexico and Anatol Stefanowitsch of the University of Hamburg agreed to be web designer and web editor, respectively. ICLA Regional Affiliates A motion to simplify affiliation procedures for local cognitive linguistics associations was approved. Instead of requiring General Assembly approval as previously, now only the ICLA Governing Board needs to approve affiliation. Three local cognitive linguistic associations applied for an affiliation with the ICLA: the Finnish Cognitive Linguistics Association, the Polish Cognitive Linguistics Association, and the Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association. The applications of the Finnish and the Slavic associations were approved by the board and General Assembly. Unfortunately, the needed information for the Polish Cognitive Linguistic Association was not available at the time of the conference. [After the conference, the Polish Association submitted the needed information to the ICLA board and the affiliation was approved via email in September 2001. Approved affiliates, along with detailed conditions and procedures for affiliation, were posted on Affiliates starting in 2002.] The Editorial Board of Cognitive Linguistics held their meeting as part of the ICLA Governing Board meeting. Arie Verhagen reported on the journal. He also agreed to continue for two more years as journal editor, with the understanding that he would step down after that. The procedure for selecting the new journal editor was codified as follows: The editor is appointed for an initial term of 6 years, renewable for periods of 2 years each. The year preceding her/his last as editor will be devoted to the gradual handing over of reponsibilities to the new editor. The new editor is selected by the President of the ICLA, the current editor, and the publisher, from a shortlist drawn up up by the ICLA Governing Board in the year preceding the transitional year. Anke Beck reported on journal finances. The Governing Board decided on recommendations for board positions for 2001-2003. An election was held at the meeting of the General Assembly. The following Board members were elected: Suzanne Kemmer (President), Marjolijn Verspoor (Secretary/Treasurer), Ronald Langacker, Sally Rice, and Kee Dong Lee (regular members). Francisco J. Ruiz de Mendoza was appointed to the Governing Board as representative of the ICLC 8 Organizing Committee. Other Ex-officio members: Arie Verhagen (Editor Cognitive Linguistics) and Dirk Geeraerts (Most recent Past President). Report submitted by Marjolijn Verspoor. Approved by the ICLA Governing Board at ICLC 8, Logroño, July 22, 2003. Edited and posted 2003 by S. Kemmer. | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[52]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/benjlinks.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","ICLA links to content from John Benjamins, B.V.    ","",""," ICLA links to content from John Benjamins, B.V. International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Member content : Benjamins content Available to ICLA members from John Benjamins B.V. The following materials are available from ICLA-supporting publisher John Benjamins. These content materials are either offered to members of the ICLA for a reduced price, or are included with the membership. Bibliography of Metaphor and Metonymy This is a one-time offer for ICLA members to receive, for a reduced price, a 12-month personal-use-only subscription to this new bibliography compiled by Rene Dirven and colleagues. The bibliography is a substantial collection of citations on metaphor and metonymy going back to 1990. Updated 22 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[53]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/emcllistserv.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics mailing list    ","",""," Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics mailing list International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Listservs : EMCL-L Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics A new listserv dedicated to empirical testing of hypotheses in Cognitive Linguistics is now open. This e-list, the Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics List (EMCL-L), developed out of the Workshop on Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics held at Cornell University, May 2003. EMCL-L is intended as a forum for researchers interested in all aspects of empirical work in Cognitive Linguistics. This includes, but is not limited to, experimental methods, statistics, and issues relating to the ways that Cognitive Linguistics theory can be tested empirically. Feel free to post questions, observations, TOCs etc. concerned with empirical methods. (Please, no attachments.) To subscribe, send the following in the body of a plain text message to listproc@cornell.edu subscribe EMCL-L Firstname Lastname where Firstname Lastname is replaced by your real name, and you can type either in capital or small letters. Similarly, to unsubscribe send the following to the same address above: unsubscribe EMCL-L Firstname Lastname To send a message to the whole list, send the message (in plain text) to EMCL-L@cornell.edu. Send the message from the account subscribed. No attachments, please. For list-specific assistance, questions, or issues please contact the owners of the EMCL-L email list, reachable at EMCL-L-request@cornell.edu. Additional information on listserv commands is found at http://www.cit.cornell.edu/computer/email/using-lists/ Questions about the Cornell Email List service in general may be directed to listmgr@cornell.edu. | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[54]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/laudconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","LAUD Symposia    ","",""," LAUD Symposia International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : LAUD Symposia Linguistic Agency University of Duisburg (LAUD) Symposia Upcoming conferences 32nd International LAUD Symposium: Cognitive Approaches to Second/Foreign Language Processing: Theory and Pedagogy. University of Koblenz-Landau, Landau, Germany. March 10-13, 2008. Website to come. Contact person: Martin Pütz, puetz at uni-landau.de . Abstracts deadline: Sept. 1, 2007. Past conferences 31st International LAUD Symposium, 2006. Updated 20 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[55]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/lcmconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Language, Culture, and Mind conferences series    ","",""," Language, Culture, and Mind conferences series International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : Language, Culture, and Mind conference series Language, Culture, and Mind conference series Upcoming conferences The third conference in the series Language, Culture and Mind (LCM 3) will be held in Odense 14th-16th July, 2008. Special theme: Social Life and Meaning Construction. Theme session proposals due September 2007. Contact: Anders Hougaard, hougaard AT language.sdu.dk Past conferences The second conference on Language, Culture, and Mind (LCM 2) was held in Paris, July 17-20, 2006. Language, Culture and Mind: Integrating Perspectives and Methodologies (LCM 1), took place at the University of Portsmouth, England, 18-20 July, 2004. Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[56]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/emclconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics Conferences    ","",""," Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : EMCL Conferences Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics conferences Upcoming conferences Past conferences EMCL 3, Developing an Experiment: From Conception to Implementation was held October 17-18, 2006 at the University of Murcia (Spain). EMCL 3 was a satellite event of the 5th international conference of the Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Association (AELCO-SCOLA) held in 2006. EMCL 2, a workshop on Image-Schemas and Linguistic Relativity, took place July 17, 2004 in Portsmouth, UK, preceding the first Language, Culture and Mind conference (LCM 1) at the University of Portsmouth. The First Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics workshop, EMCL 1, took place at Cornell University, May 2-4, 2003. Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[57]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/taiwanconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Cognitive Conferences in Taiwan     ","",""," Cognitive Conferences in Taiwan International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : Cognitive Linguistics Conferences in Taiwan Cognitive Conferences in Taiwan, ROC Upcoming conferences Past conferences International Symposium on Language, Culture and Cognition, National Taiwan University, March 9-10, 2007. Keynote lectures by Melissa Bowerman, William Croft, Suzanne Kemmer, Masayoshi Shibatani. Updated 24 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[58]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/estconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Cognitive Conferences in Estonia    ","",""," Cognitive Conferences in Estonia International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : Cognitive Linguistics Conferences in Estonia Cognitive Conferences in Estonia Upcoming conferences Cognitive and Functional Perspectives on Dynamic Tendencies in Languages, University of Tartu, Estonia, May 29-June 1, 2008 Past conferences Updated 24 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[59]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/norconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Cognitive Conferences in Norway     ","",""," Cognitive Conferences in Norway International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : Cognitive Linguistics Conferences in Norway Cognitive Conferences in Norway Upcoming conferences Past conferences Norwegian Cognitive Summer Seminar 2006, Bergen, Norway, June 2006 Updated 24 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[60]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/portconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Cognitive Conferences in Portugal    ","",""," Cognitive Conferences in Portugal International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : Cognitive Conferences in Portugal Cognitive Conferences in Portugal Upcoming conferences Symposium on Language and Robots, 10-12 December, 2007. Universidade de Aveiro, Portugal. Abstracts deadline (extended): Sept. 24, 2007. Past conferences Corpus Linguistics, Quantitative Linguistics, and Linguistic Variation, Universidade Católica Portuguesa, Braga, Portugal, March 2006 Pre-conference to the 8th ICLC, Universidade Católica Portuguesa, Braga, Portugal, July 2003 Updated 10 Sept 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[61]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/centeuropeconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Central Europe Conferences    ","",""," Central Europe Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : Central European CL Conferences Cognitive Linguistics Conferences in Central Europe Converging and Diverging Tendencies in Cognitive Linguistics took place in Dubrovnik, Croatia, 17-18 October 2005, organized by the universities of Dubrovnik and Osijek. Keynote speakers were: Ronald Langacker, Zoltan Kovecses, Suzanne Kemmer, Guenter Radden, Klaus-Uwe Panther, Linda Thornburg, and Francisco Ruiz de Mendoza Ibanez. A volume of contributions from the conference is underway, edited by Mario Brdar. Updated 15 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[62]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/chinaconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","Cognitive Linguistics Conferences in China    ","",""," Cognitive Linguistics Conferences in China International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : Cognitive Linguistics in China Cognitive Linguistics Conferences in China Upcoming conferences 4th China International Forum on Cognitive Linguistics, Beijing, Oct 12-18, 2007. Hosted jointly by Beihang University (main host), Tsinghua U, Peking U, Beijing Normal U, Beijing Foreign Studies U, and Beijing Language and Culture University. Forum speaker: Leonard Talmy, Ten Lectures on Cognitive Semantics. Three Chinese scholars, Prof. Shen Jiaxuan (Chinese Social Science Academy), Hu Zhuanglin (English Dept., Peking U), and Lu Jianming (Chinese Dept., Peking U) will also give presentations. Free registration until Oct. 10. Contact: Forum President Thomas Li at thomasli AT buaa.edu.cn . Past conferences 3rd China International Forum on Cognitive Linguistics, Beijing, April 7-15, 2006. Forum Speaker: Ronald Langacker, Ten Lectures on Cognitive Grammar. Lectures transcribed and published on DVD with accompanying text by Beijing Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press, 2007. For further information contact Thomas Li at thomasli AT buaa.edu.cn . 2nd China International Forum on Cognitive Linguistics, Beijing, Nov. 17-30, 2005. Forum Speaker: John Taylor, Ten Lectures on Applied Cognitive Linguistics. Lectures transcribed and published on DVD with accompanying text by Beijing Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press, 2007. For further information contact Thomas Li at thomasli AT buaa.edu.cn . 1st China International Forum on Cognitive Linguistics, Beijing, April 9-15, 2004. Forum Speaker: George Lakoff, Ten Lectures on Cognitive Linguistics. Lectures transcribed and published on DVD with accompanying text by Beijing Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press, 2007. For further information contact Thomas Li at thomasli AT buaa.edu.cn . Updated 9 Sept 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[63]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/swedconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Swedish Cognitive Conferences    ","",""," Swedish Cognitive Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : Swedish Cognitive Linguistics Conferences Swedish cognitive conferences Upcoming conferences On Nov 29 - Dec 1, 2007, the First Conference of the Swedish Association for Language and Cognition (SALC) will be held at the Centre for Languages and Literature, Lund University. One-page abstracts (of no more than 500 words, including references) should be sent as an attachment (MS Word preferred) to Marlene Johansson Falck, at marlene@magicspelling.com by June 1st 2007. Past conferences On June 15-17, 2006, an International Conference and Constituting Meeting of the Swedish Association for Language and Cognition was held at Umeå University, Sweden. See the conference website. Contact: Marie.Nordlund AT ltu.se. Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[64]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/ukconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","UK Cognitive Conferences    ","",""," UK Cognitive Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : UK Cognitive Conferences UK Cognitive Linguistics Conferences (UK-CLA affiliate and others) Upcoming conferences The international conference on Language, Communication and Cognition will take place on the Falmer campus of the University of Brighton, August 4th-7th 2008. Abstracts to be submitted electronically to lcc@brighton.ac.uk . Deadline for abstracts: November 26th 2007. Past conferences 2nd Conference of the UK-Cognitive Linguistics Association: New Directions in Cognitive Linguistics, hosted at Cardiff University, August 27-30, 2007 Symposium on Language, Communication & Cognition, a workshop held jointly by the University of Portsmouth and the University of Sussex, took place May 25-26th 2006, in Brighton, Sussex, U.K. First UK Postgraduate Conference in Cognitive Linguistics (PGCCL), a one-day conference, followed on to the above symposium on Saturday, 27th May 2006. Dept. of Linguistics and English Language, University of Sussex, Brighton, U.K. New directions in Cognitive Linguistics: First UK Cognitive Linguistics conference (UK-CLC 1), University of Sussex, Brighton, U.K., 23-25 October 2005. The organizers are editing a volume based on the conference. Language, Culture and Mind: Integrating Perspectives and Methodologies, University of Portsmouth, England, 18-20 July, 2004. There is a volume planned from selected papers from the conference. Updated 15 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[65]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/csdlconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","8K","CSDL Conferences    ","",""," CSDL Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : CSDL Conferences CSDL Conferences Upcoming CSDL conference CSDL 9: The 9th CSDL conference, Meaning, Form, and Body, will be hosted by the College of Arts & Sciences at Case Western University. The organizers are Fey Parrill, Vera Tobin, and Mark Turner. It will take place October 18-20, 2008. The deadline for abstract submissions will be mid-May 2008. Past CSDL conferences CSDL 8: The 8th CSDL conference, CSDL 2006, took place November 3-5, 2006. It was hosted by the Department of Cognitive Science, UCSD, and organized by Seana Coulson. The keynote speakers were William Croft and Ronald Langacker. Publication of a selection of regular session papers is underway; the publisher will be CSLI Publications of Stanford, CA. In addition to the regular sessions, there were two special workshops: Language Evolution and Evolutionary Linguistics, organized by Arie Verhagen, and Constructions and Language Change, organized by Suzanne Kemmer and Martin Hilpert. CSDL 7: CSDL 2004: Experimental and Empirical Methods took place at the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada, October 8-10, 2004. Organizers: John Newman and Sally Rice. Keynote speakers: Larry Barsalou (Emory University), Russ Tomlin (University of Oregon) and Nick Evans (University of Melbourne). The conference volume, edited by John Newman and Sally Rice, is scheduled to appear with CSLI Publications in 2007. CSDL 6: The 6th CSDL conference, CSDL 6: Language, Culture and Mind, was hosted by the Department of Linguistics and the Center for the Study of Cultures, Rice University, Houston, Texas, October 11-14, 2002. Organizers: Michel Achard and Suzanne Kemmer. Keynote speakers: John Lucy (U. Chicago), Susanna Cumming (UCSB), Ronald Langacker (UCSD). Volume from CSDL 6: Language, Culture, and Mind, ed. by Michel Achard and Suzanne Kemmer, Stanford: CSLI Publications, 2004. CSDL 5: The 5th CSDL conference, CSDL 2000, was hosted by UC Santa Barbaras Center for the Study of Discourse and the Department of Linguistics, in Santa Barbara, California, May 11-14, 2000. The invited speakers were Kathryn BOCK (Illinois), Wallace CHAFE (Santa Barbara), Dedre GENTNER (Northwestern), Rachel GIORA (Tel Aviv), George LAKOFF (Berkeley), Ron LANGACKER (San Diego), Charles LI (Santa Barbara), and Sandra THOMPSON (Santa Barbara). Organizers: Susanna Cumming and Jack Du Bois. CSDL 4: October 10-12, 1998, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia. Organizer: Alan Cienki. Theme sessions: Grammatical Constructions (invited speakers Joan Bybee, Brian McWhinney, T. Givon); First Language Acquisition (invited speakers Nancy Budwig, Eve Clark, Michael Tomasello); Conceptual Blending and Metaphor (invited speakers Eve Sweetser, Gilles Fauconnier, George Lakoff). Volume from CSDL 4: Conceptual and Discourse Factors in Linguistic Structure, ed. by Alan Cienki, Barbara J. Luka, and Michael B. Smith, Stanford: CSLI Publications, 2001. CSDL 3: The 3rd CSDL conference, CSDL 97, took place at the University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, May 24-26, 1997. Co-organizers: Laura Michaelis, Dan Jurafsky and Barbara Fox. Invited speakers: Herb Clark, Susanna Cumming, Walter Kintsch, George Lakoff, Dan Slobin, Elizabeth Traugott. 3 panel sessions: Spatial Relations; Text; Historical Change. Panelists included: William Croft, Gilles Fauconnier, Arthur Glenberg, Annette Herskovits, Ronald Langacker, Lise Menn, Elizabeth ODowd, Eve Sweetser, Leonard Talmy. Volume from CSDL 3: Cognition and Function in Language, ed. by Barbara Fox, Dan Jurafsky, and Laura Michaelis, Stanford: CSLI Publications, 1999. CSDL 2: The Second CSDL Conference was held at SUNY Buffalo, Buffalo, New York. Organizer: Jean-Pierre Koenig. Volume from CSDL 2: Discourse and Cognition: Bridging the Gap, ed. by Jean-Pierre Koenig, Stanford: CSLI Publications, 1998. CSDL 1: The First CSDL conference, Conceptual Structure, Discourse and Language, took place in November 1994 at UCSD, San Diego, California. Organizer: Adele Goldberg. Volume from CSDL 1: Conceptual Structure, Discourse and Language, ed. by Adele Goldberg, Stanford: CSLI Publications, 1996. Updated 15 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[66]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/frconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","French Cognitive Linguistics Conferences    ","",""," French Cognitive Linguistics Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : French CL Conferences French Cognitive Linguistics Conferences (AFLiCo affiliate and others) Upcoming conferences Past conferences The Second AFLiCo conference, Typology, Gesture and Sign, was held at the University of Lille 3, May 10-12, 2007. Besides the general session there were theme sessions on Language Typology, Signed Languages, and Gesture. Publication of the conference papers is underway. A workshop on Space and Language was held before the conference on May 9. The Second Language Culture and Mind Conference, LCM 2, was held in Paris 17-20 July, 2006. From Gram to Mind: Grammar as Cognition, the inaugural meeting of the French Cognitive Linguistics Association (AFLiCo), was held in Bordeaux, France, 19-21 May, 2005. Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[67]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/germconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","German Cognitive Linguistics Association (GCLA/DGKL) Conferences    ","",""," German Cognitive Linguistics Association (GCLA/DGKL) Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : German CLA Conferences German Cognitive conferences (GCLA affiliate and others) Upcoming conferences The Third International Conference of the German Linguistics Association (DGKL/GCLA), with the special theme Converging Evidence, will be held in Leipzig, September 25-27, 2008. Deadline for theme sessions: 10th November, 2007; deadline for paper and poster submissions: 1st December 2007. Past conferences The Second International DGKL/GCLA Conference was held in Munich on October 5-7, 2006. Plenary speakers: Ewa Dabrowska, Dimitrij Dobrovolskij, Adele Goldberg, Zoltan Kovecses, Brigitte Nerlich, Mark Turner. On December 10-11, 2004, the international conference Current Trends in Cognitive Linguistics/Aktuelle Entwicklungen in der Kognitiven Linguistik (DGKL-2004) was held at the University of Hamburg, Germany. This was the inaugural meeting of the DGKL/GCLA. Updated 26 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[68]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/russianconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","Cognitive Linguistics Conferences in Russia    ","",""," Cognitive Linguistics Conferences in Russia International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : Russia Conferences Cognitive Linguistics Conferences in Russia Upcoming conferences The Third International Conference on Cognitive Science (Biennale of Cognitive Science 2008) will be held in Moscow, Russia June 20-25, 2008. Organizer: Yuri I. Alexandrov. Invited speakers include the Nobel Prize winners Gerald Edelman and Daniel Kahneman, as well as Antonio Damasio, Marc Hauser, George Lakoff, Michael Tomasello, Anne Treisman, Stella Vosniadou and others. DEADLINE for abstract submission: December 1, 2007. Abstracts should be submitted online via the conference website. Past conferences Cognitive Linguistics International Congress, 26-28 September 2006, Tambov, Russia (Tambov State University named after G.R. Derzhavin). Conference Coordinator: Professor Liudmila Fours. The Second Biennial Conference on Cognitive Science, sponsored by the The Russian Association for Cognitive Studies and the Cognitive Science Society, took place June 9-13, 2006, in St. Petersburg, Russia. Organizer: Tatiana V. Chernigovskaya (St. Petersburg State University). Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[69]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/pclaconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","PTJK/PCLA Conferences    ","",""," PTJK/PCLA Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : PTJK/PCLA Conferences PTJK/PCLA Conferences Upcoming conferences Past conferences An international conference called Perspectives on Metonymy was held in Lodz, Poland, May 6-8, 2005. At the end of September 2003, the PTJK/PCLA held a conference/seminar devoted to Imagery in Language (IMAIL) in honor of Ronald W. Langacker. The conference was planned to immediately precede the occasion of Professor Langacker receiving his Doctor Honoris Causa (honorary doctorate) from the University of Lodz. This degree ceremony took place on October 1, 2003. In 2001 the PCLA hosted an international conference Cognitive Linguistics in the Year 2001. The invited speakers included Ronald Langacker, Zoltan Kovecses, Guenter Radden, and Laura Janda. The proceedings of the conference are being published by Peter Lang Verlag. Another conference organized by members of the PCLA, entitled Cognitivism in Poetics and Stylistics, was also held in Lodz in 2001. Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[70]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/slavconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association (SCLA) conferences    ","",""," Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association (SCLA) conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : Slavic CLA conferences Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association (SCLA) Conferences Upcoming conferences Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association Conference 2007, Oct. 12-14, 2007, University of Chicago Past conferences The first Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association meeting took place in conjunction with the meeting of the Finnish Cognitive Linguistics Association (FiCLA) meeting in Turku, Finland September 13-15, 2002. The SLING2K (Slavic Linguistics 2000) was held in February 2000 at.... Updated 20 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[71]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/ficlaconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","6K","Finnish Cognitive Linguistics Association (FiCLA) Conferences    ","",""," Finnish Cognitive Linguistics Association (FiCLA) Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : FiCLA Conferences FiCLA Conferences Upcoming FiCLA conferences Past FiCLA conferences A symposium organized by the Finnish Cognitive Linguistics (FiCLA) on Metaphors of Power was held 12-13 October 2006 in Helsinki. A symposium organized by the Finnish Cognitive Linguistics (FiCLA) on Interdisciplinary Themes in Cognitive Language Research was held November 25-26, 2005 in Helsinki. A workshop on semantics organized by FiCLA, Cognitivism Meets Dynamism, took place June 14, 2005 in Espoo, Finland. The workshop was held in connection with the International and Interdisciplinary Conference on Adaptive Knowledge Representation and Reasoning (AKRR05) at the Helsinki University of Technology in Espoo. The 2004 FiCLA seminars were The Whole Capacity of Language at the Helsinki University of Technology in April 2004 and Processing and Experience at the University of Joensuu in September 2004. In 2003 FiCLA organized two seminars: in June, Subjectivity in Language, and in October, Module Storming, both at the University of Turku. In 2002 two FiCLA seminars were held at the University of Turku: Language in the Middle of Cognition II and Cognitive Linguistics East of Eden, the latter held in September 2002 in collaboration with the Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association affiliate. In addition, FiCLA sponsored a workshop on The Generalization of Scientific Results at the University of Joensuu. In September 2001 a FiCLA symposium on Linguistic Conceptualization and Context was held at the Abo Akademi University in Turku. In October 2000, FiCLA organized a multi-disciplinary seminar Language in the Middle of Cognition aboard M/S Viking Amorella, Turku. In May 2000, FiCLA held its first annual meeting at the University of Oulu. Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[72]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/spconfs.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Conferences    ","",""," Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events : Spanish Cognitive Conferences Cognitive Linguistics Conferences in Spain Upcoming Cognitive Linguistics Conferences in Spain Past Conferences The 5th international conference of the Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Association (AELCO-SCOLA): Cognitive Linguistics as a Cognitive Science, was held 19-21 October 2006, in Murcia, Spain. Language Learning, Language Use and Cognitive Modelling: Applied Perspectives across Disciplines took place at the Universidad Nacional de Educacion a Distancia (UNED), Madrid, 30 March-1 April 2006. Earlier AELCO-SCOLA conferences: 2004: Universidad de Zaragoza 2002: Universitat de València 2000: Universidad Complutense de Madrid 1998: University of Alicante Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[73]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/ukcla.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","U.K. Cognitive Linguistics Association (UK-CLA)    ","",""," U.K. Cognitive Linguistics Association (UK-CLA) International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : UK-CLA The U.K. Cognitive Linguistics Association (UK-CLA) Founded October 2005; affiliation approved by ICLA Governing Board February 2006 Aims The central objectives of the UK-CLA are to develop and promote the multi-disciplinary field of Cognitive Linguistics within the UK, as well as contribute to the research- and event-based synergy currently growing across Europe, and to foster initiatives and exchanges at the wider international level. In addition, the Association strongly supports contacts and cooperation between its members, the development of research projects, curricula and international graduate and doctoral programmes in Cognitive Linguistics, as well as the organisation of conferences, workshops, and other relevant events. A key aspect of the work undertaken by the Association will be cooperation with other Cognitive Linguistics Associations, under the auspices of the International Cognitive Linguistics Association. The most general aim is to promote Cognitive Linguistics in all its diverse disciplinary areas, and to develop the field at the educational as well as at the professional levels of interaction. UK-CLA conferences UK-CLA website | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[74]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/csdla.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Conceptual Structure, Discourse and Language Association (CSDLA)    ","",""," Conceptual Structure, Discourse and Language Association (CSDLA) International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : CSDLA Conceptual Structure, Discourse and Language Association (CSDLA) Founded July 2005 (although informal group ran conferences from 1994); affiliation approved by the ICLA Governing Board at ICLC 9 in Seoul in July, 2005. Aims CSDL conferences CSDLA website | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[75]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/jcla.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Japanese Cognitive Linguistics Association (JCLA)    ","",""," Japanese Cognitive Linguistics Association (JCLA) International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : JCLA Japanese Cognitive Linguistics Association (JCLA) Founded September, 2000. Affiliation approved by the ICLA Governing Board at ICLC 9 in Seoul in July, 2005. Aims JCLA exists to promote research into Cognitive Linguistics and to support contacts and cooperation among its members. To this end, JCLA hosts an annual conference meeting featuring symposia, workshops, and other presentations; other seminars besides the meeting; and publishes the conference handbook and the proceedings of its annual meeting. JCLA conferences JCLA websites English version; Full version, in Japanese | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[76]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/aflico.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Association Française de Linguistique Cognitive (AFLiCo)    ","",""," Association Française de Linguistique Cognitive (AFLiCo) International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : AFLiCo Association Française de Linguistique Cognitive (AFLiCo) Founded May 2005; affiliation approved by the ICLA Governing Board at ICLC 9 in Seoul in July, 2005. Aims The Française de Linguistique Cognitive (AFLiCo) aims to bring together researchers in France who work in, or have a genuine interest in, the field of Cognitive Linguistics, by means of publications, conferences, symposia, and other activities. It is committed to promoting linguistic study within the general framework of Cognitive Linguistics both in France and at the international level. AFLiCo conferences AFLiCo website | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[77]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/gcla.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","GCLA/DGKL    ","",""," GCLA/DGKL International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : GCLA The German Cognitive Linguistics Association/Deutsche Gesellschaft für Kognitive Linguistik (GCLA/DGKL) Founded December 2004; affiliation approved by the ICLA Governing Board in March, 2005. About us The purpose of DGKL/GCLA (Deutsche Gesellschaft für Kognitive Linguistik/German Cognitive Linguistics Association) is to promote Cognitive Linguistics at the national and international levels. The association supports research and education in Cognitive Linguistics and the application of its results, in particular contacts and cooperation among its members, the development of research projects, curricula and international graduate and doctoral programs, as well as the organization of national and international conferences and workshops. Membership in the association is open to everyone who is committed to its aims as well as to its basic theoretical and methodological tenets. GCLA/DGKL conferences GCLA/DGKL website | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[78]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/rcla.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Russian Cognitive Linguists Association(RCLA)    ","",""," Russian Cognitive Linguists Association(RCLA) International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : RCLA Russian Cognitive Linguists Association (RCLA) Founded 2004; affiliation approved by the ICLA Governing Board in March, 2004. Aims RCLA conferences RCLA website | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[79]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/pcla.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Polish Cognitive Linguistics Association (PTJK/PCLA)    ","",""," Polish Cognitive Linguistics Association (PTJK/PCLA) International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : PCLA Polskie Towarzystwo Jezykoznawstwa Kognitywnego/Polish Cognitive Linguistics Association (PTJK/PCLA) Founded October 2000 in Lodz, Poland; affiliation approved by the ICLA Governing Board in September/October, 2001 Aims The aim of the organization is to promote and support research in the field of cognitive linguistics and interdisciplinary cognitive studies, organize conferences and seminars as a forum for discussion and exchange of ideas, encourage its members to offer courses in cognitive linguistics at their departments. We are also planning to publish a periodical devoted to cognitive linguistics research, and other materials as relevant. PTJK/PCLA Meetings PTJK/PCLA Webpage | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[80]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/slavic.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association (SCLA)    ","",""," Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association (SCLA) International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : SCLA The Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association Affiliation approved by the ICLA General Assembly at ICLC 7, Santa Barbara, July 2001. Aims The Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association pursues a threefold mission: To promote Cognitive Linguistics, and particularly to encourage graduate students and junior faculty to pursue research on the Slavic languages in the framework of Cognitive Linguistics To encourage the practical application of Cognitive Linguistics, particularly in the development of pedagogical materials for the teaching of Slavic languages To encourage interdisciplinary applications of Cognitive Linguistics, particularly in the area of literary analysis. SCLA conferences SCLA website | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[81]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/ficla.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Finnish Cognitive Linguistics Association (FiCLA)    ","",""," Finnish Cognitive Linguistics Association (FiCLA) International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : FiCLA The Finnish Cognitive Linguistics Association (FiCLA) Founded 1999; affiliation approved by the ICLA General Assembly at ICLC 7 in Santa Barbara, July 2001. Aims The Finnish Cognitive Linguistics Association (FiCLA) fosters dialogue between researchers interested in the relationship between language and cognition, with special emphasis on facilitating various research orientations. FiCLA conferences FiCLA website | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[82]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/aelcoscola.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Asociación Española de Lingüística Cognitiva/Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Association (AELCO-SCOLA)    ","",""," Asociación Española de Lingüística Cognitiva/Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Association (AELCO-SCOLA) International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : AELCO-SCOLA Asociación Española de Lingüística Cognitiva/Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Association (AELCO-SCOLA) Founded and informally affiliated at ICLC 5, Amsterdam in July, 1997 (although informal group ran conferences since 1994); affiliation formally approved by the ICLA General Assembly at ICLC 6 in Stockholm, July 1999. Aims The objective of AELCO-SCOLA is to foment, stimulate, and instigate, in Spain, research in Cognitive Linguistics in all its manifestations by means of whatever activity favors scientific study by Spanish linguists in this field, and the cooperation and exchange of scientific information among all researchers in this geographic area. AELCO-SCOLA meetings AELCO-SCOLA website | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[83]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/affilproc.shtml","2007-10-05","7K","Affiliation Procedure    ","",""," Affiliation Procedure International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates : Affiliation procedure Conditions and Procedures for Affiliation with the ICLA How to apply for affiliation A group wishing to affiliate with the ICLA is required to submit an application to the ICLA Governing Board. The application should include the following: A statement of the desire to affiliate, based on broad adherence to the aims and scope of the ICLA A list of the groups current officers, and information about how to contact them (notably institutional affiliation, mailing address, email address, telephone and fax numbers) An indication of the groups current status (e.g. how long it has existed, how often it meets), its objectives, its recent and upcoming activities, and the number of members The groups constitution and/or other defining documents Optionally, a list of members (preferably with information about how to contact them) Optionally, a website address that can be linked to the ICLA webpage. The group website should include pages that contain the information in (b), (c), and (d) above and be regularly updated. The Governing Board will decide on applications for affiliation. New applications may be submitted at any time by sending an application and supporting documents to the ICLA President and the Secretary by email. Newly approved affiliates will be announced at the next regular Business Meeting of the Assembly of the ICLA. How to maintain affiliation To maintain affiliation, a group is merely required to file a brief yearly report with the ICLA Secretary. The yearly report should include the following: An updated list of the groups current officers, with their current affiliations and contact information A brief summary of the groups developments and activities for the year (a page is sufficient) Optionally, an updated list of members (and information about how to contact them) Anything else the groups officers care to submit. Organizations should, if possible, construct an organization website that can be linked to the ICLA affiliates page. To save time in making sure ICLA has access to the most up-to-date information on the affiliate, the ICLA Secretary/Treasurer can simply check the organizations website in lieu of requesting an annual report, to see that its information is both complete and current. All ICLA affiliate websites should include the following information, either on the affiliate homepage, or on linked pages easily visible on the affiliates homepage. The website should be in a language readable by ICLA members from different continents. Aims of the organization A list of past and upcoming conferences The affiliates basic information, which includes: Current Governing Board/officers (with the dates of their terms) Constitution and date ratified Contact information (usually, the affiliate Secretarys address) so that prospective members can join The organizations history (ideal, but optional) A link from the homepage to the ICLA homepage A working back button; that is, there should be a way to get back easily to the ICLA pages. [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[84]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/pnp.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","Policies and Procedures    ","",""," Policies and Procedures International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Policies and Procedures ICLA Policies and Procedures Constitution (July 1997) Approving affiliates (July 2001) Article 4 of the Constitution was modified at ICLC 7 in July, 2001, such that the ICLA Governing Board is responsible for not only setting guidelines for affiliation but also for approving affiliates. Approval of the Assembly for each affiliate is not required. See Conditions and Procedures for Affiliation with the ICLA. Cognitive Linguistics editor selection (Sept 2001) Article 8 of the Constitution was amended at ICLC 7 in July, 2001 to provide more specific wording regarding editor selection. The newly adopted wording is: The editor is appointed for an initial term of 6 years, renewable for periods of 2 years each. The year preceding her/his last as editor will be devoted to the gradual handing over of reponsibilities to the new editor. The new editor is selected by the President of the ICLA, the current editor, and the publisher, from a shortlist drawn up by the ICLA Governing Board in the year preceding the transitional year. Proposals for hosting an ICLC: Guidelines and procedures (Sept 2003) Proposals for Hosting an ICLC approved by the Board September 2003. Policy relating to selection of ICLC venues (July 2005) At the Governing Board meeting at ICLC 9 in Seoul, Korea, July 2005, the Board decided that selection of an ICLC venue for a given conference year would be done no more than 4 years in advance of the conference, so that conference venues would not be locked up far in advance before others intending to submit proposals could have a chance to submit them. Definitions and Duties of the ICLA Governing Board Roles and Non-Board ICLA Roles (July 2007) Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[85]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/confreports.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Final Conference Reports of the International Cognitive Linguistics Conferences 2001-present     ","",""," Final Conference Reports of the International Cognitive Linguistics Conferences 2001-present International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Final Conference Reports ICLC Final Conference Reports 2001-present ICLC 7 2001, Santa Barbara Updated 27 July 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[86]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/boardmtgs.shtml","2007-10-05","4K","Reports on the Meetings of the ICLA Governing Board and Business Meetings, 2001-present     ","",""," Reports on the Meetings of the ICLA Governing Board and Business Meetings, 2001-present International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Meeting Reports ICLA Governing Board and Business Meeting Reports, 2001-present ICLC 7 2001, Santa Barbara, USA ICLC 8 2003, Logroño, Spain ICLC 9 2005, Seoul, Korea ICLC 10 2007, Krakow, Poland (In preparation) Updated 27 July 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[87]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/constitution.shtml","2007-10-05","8K","ICLA Constitution    ","",""," ICLA Constitution International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : ICLA Constitution ICLA Constitution Adopted on July 17, 1997, in Amsterdam, during the ICLA presidency of Ronald Langacker The organizations name is the International Cognitive Linguistics Association (abbreviated ICLA). Its purpose is to support and promote the various approaches to linguistic theory, description, and applications that collectively have come to be known as cognitive linguistics. Membership in the ICLA includes a subscription to the official journal of the ICLA, Cognitive Linguistics. Membership in the ICLA is accomplished by paying a yearly subscription/membership fee. The amount of the membership fee that goes to the ICLA is determined by the Governing Board with the approval of the Assembly. A special reduced fee is offered to facilitate student membership. The formation of national and regional branches of the ICLA is encouraged. Conditions for their affiliation with the ICLA are established by its Governing Board with the approval of the Assembly. [Modified July 2001 to allow approval by Governing Board alone, see Policies and Procedures]. The ICLA periodically holds an international conference open to all its members and others who wish to attend. The time and location of conferences are recommended by the Governing Board and approved by the Assembly. The conference normally takes place every two years. The locations shall vary to reflect the geographical spread of the ICLA community. The ICLA Assembly consists of all members who deliberate on a particular occasion, convened in either of two ways: (i) The Assembly may consist of all members who attend an open and publicized business meeting held during a regular ICLA conference. (ii) Alternatively, the Assembly may consist of all members contacted by the ICLA mailing list, provided that the Governing Board makes every reasonable effort to ensure that the communication reaches the entire ICLA membership. The Governing Board consists of the ICLA President, the Secretary/Treasurer, three regular members, and ex officio members. Ex officio members include the editor of Cognitive Linguistics, the most recent Past President of the ICLA, and a representative from the organizing committee of the next ICLA conference. The President and the three regular members are elected by the Assembly for two-year terms and the Secretary/Treasurer for a four-year term at the business meeting held during a regular ICLA conference. Nominations for these positions can be made from the floor during the meeting, or else by prior notification of the Secretary/Treasurer from any five ICLA members. The editor of Cognitive Linguistics is selected, for a term not to exceed six years, by joint approval of the Governing Board, the Assembly, and the publisher of the journal. [Editor selection procedure amended by Governing Board, July 2001, see Policies and Procedures]. If duly elected or appointed, any Board member can serve multiple terms. Day-to-day management of ICLA affairs is entrusted to the President and Secretary/Treasurer, who act on any particular matter in coordination with those within the ICLA who hold official organizational responsibilities pertaining to that matter. Approval of the Governing Board is required for decisions of a substantial nature, especially those involving multiple domains of responsibility. Decisions with major or long-term consequences may be decided by the Governing Board on an interim basis if necessary, but must be submitted to the Assembly for ultimate approval. Any two Board members have the right to call a board meeting. At each ICLA conference business meeting, the President, Secretary/Treasurer, and the editor of Cognitive Linguistics report to the Assembly concerning the execution of their responsibilities since the last such meeting. This Constitution becomes official upon approval by the Assembly at an ICLA conference business meeting; a three-fifths majority of those voting is required for adoption. The Assembly can amend the Constitution at any time by a vote with the same majority. Other decisions by the Assembly require only a simple majority of those voting. [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[88]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/iclapubs.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","ICLA-Sponsored publication venues    ","",""," ICLA-Sponsored publication venues International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : ICLA publication venues ICLA-sponsored publication venues Cognitive Linguistics is the primary journal for the field of Cognitive Linguistics. Published by Mouton, CL is sent to all ICLA members. The journal was founded at the time the ICLA was established, and the first issue appeared in 1990. The editor is selected by the ICLA in consultation with Mouton, and the editorial board meetings are held biennially at the ICLC. The current editor of the journal is Ewa Dabrowska, who began working on the journal with the previous editor, Adele Goldberg, at the end of 2006 and took over as editor-in-chief on January 1, 2007. Cognitive Linguistics Research is a monograph series which, like the journal, was founded under the auspices of the ICLA and is published by Mouton. Since its inception with the Langacker collection Concept, Image and Symbol (1990), numerous titles have appeared in the series. The current editor of the series is Dirk Geeraerts. Annual Review of Cognitive Linguistics is a review published by John Benjamins, B.V. and appearing under the auspices of the ICLA affiliate AELCO-SCOLA. Cognitive Linguistics in Practice is a series of university-level texts that is anticipated to cover all the major areas of Linguistics using the cognitive linguistic approach. Two titles have so far appeared and a wide range of others are in preparation. The CliP series is published by John Benjamins, B.V. Updated 27 July 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[89]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/iclahistory.shtml","2007-10-05","7K","ICLA History    ","",""," ICLA History International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : ICLA History ICLA: History A symposium organized by Rene Dirven, held in Duisburg in the spring of 1989, marked the birth of Cognitive Linguistics as a broadly grounded, self-conscious intellectual movement. At that conference, initiation of the journal Cognitive Linguistics was announced and plans were made to form the International Cognitive Linguistics Association. Additionally, agreement was reached to launch the monograph series Cognitive Linguistics Research. The Duisburg symposium was retroactively called the First International Cognitive Linguistics Conference. Since then, the ICLC has been held biennially. Conferences ICLC venues and main organizers: First ICLC 1989, University of Duisburg, Duisburg, Germany (Rene Dirven) Second ICLC 1991, University of California at Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, U.S. (Gene Casad) Third ICLC 1993, July 18-23, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Leuven, Belgium (Dirk Geeraerts) Fourth ICLC 1995, University of New Mexico at Albuquerque, Albuquerque, U.S. (Sherman Wilcox) Fifth ICLC 1997, Free University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands (Theo Jansen and Gisela Redeker) Sixth ICLC 1999, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden (Erling Wande) Seventh ICLC 2001, University of California at Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, U.S. (Ron Langacker) Eighth ICLC 2003, July 20-25, 2003, University of La Rioja, Logroño, Spain (Francisco J. Ruiz De Mendoza) Ninth ICLC 2005, Yonsei University, Seoul, South Korea. (Conference Chair: Hyon-Sook Shin). Tenth ICLC 2007, Jagiellonian University of Krakow, Poland (Elzbieta Tabakowska) Eleventh ICLC 2009, University of California, Berkeley (Eve Sweetser) ICLA Presidents 1990-1993 George Lakoff 1993-1995 Eve Sweetser 1995-1997 Rene Dirven 1997-1999 Ron Langacker 1999-2001 Dirk Geeraerts 2001-2003 Suzanne Kemmer 2003-2005 Suzanne Kemmer (re-elected) 2005-2007 Klaus-Uwe Panther 2007-2009 Laura Janda Cognitive Linguistics editors 1990-1995 Dirk Geeraerts 1995-2003 Arie Verhagen 2004-2006 Adele Goldberg 2006-present Ewa Dabrowska Secretary/Treasurers Regular 4-year terms begin in July, immediately after the ICLC in a given year. 1990-1993 Johan van Parijs (appointed to pre-constitution term of undefined length) 1993-1999 Marjolijn Verspoor (served 4 year term and 2 years of elected second 4 year term) 1999-2001 Margaret Winters (served 2 years of 4 year term) 2001-Dec. 2004 Marjolijn Verspoor (served 3 1/2 years of 4 year term) 2005-present, Ad Foolen (was Acting Secretary-Treasurer, Jan.-July 2005; elected to 4 year term July 2005) Reports of ICLA Board and Business Meetings 2001 Meetings, UC Santa Barbara 2003 Meetings, Logroño, Spain 2005 Meetings, Seoul, Korea Updated 27 July 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[90]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/board.shtml","2007-10-05","6K","ICLA Governing Board July 2007-2009    ","",""," ICLA Governing Board July 2007-2009 International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Governing Board 2007-9 ICLA Governing BoardJuly 2007-July 2009 Officers President Laura Janda University of North Carolina/Tromso University Slavic Dept. CB #3165 University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3165 U.S.A. laura.janda AT hum.uit.no Secretary/Treasurer Ad Foolen Department of Linguistics Radboud University Nijmegen P.O. Box 9103 NL-6500 HD Nijmegen The Netherlands Tel: +31243237037 Fax: +313611070 a.foolen AT let.ru.nl Regular members Maarten Lemmens UFR Angellier (English) Universite de Lille 3 B.P. 60149 59653 Villeneuve dAscq CEDEX France maarten.lemmens AT univ-lille3.fr David Tuggy (re-elected) a/c Instituto Lingüístico de Verano CApdo. 22067 14000 México, D.F. México 5573-2024 david_tuggy AT sil.org Arie Verhagen Chair of Dutch Linguistics Leiden University P.N. van Eyckhof 1 2311 BV Leiden The Netherlands arie.verhagen AT let.leidenuniv.nl Ex-officio members Editor in Chief, Cognitive Linguistics Ewa Dabrowska School of English Department of Linguistics University of Sheffield Sheffield S10 2TN UK e.dabrowska AT sheffield.ac.uk Past President Klaus-Uwe Panther Universität Hamburg Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik Von-Melle-Park 6 D-20146 Hamburg Germany Phone: +49-(0)40-42838-5972 Fax: +49-(0)40-42838-4856 kupanther AT t-online.de Representative of ICLC 11 2009 (Berkeley, USA) Organizing Committee Eve Sweetser Dept. of Linguistics U.C. Berkeley Berkeley CA U.S.A. sweetser AT berkeley.edu Governing Board 2001-2003 Governing Board 2003-2005 Governing Board 2005-2007 Governing Board 2007-2009 (Current Board) Updated 16 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[91]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/aims.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","ICLA Homepage    ","",""," ICLA Homepage International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : Aims and Scope Aims and Scope The International Cognitive Linguistics Association (ICLA) fosters and promotes research within the perspective of cognitive linguistics. This perspective subsumes a number of concerns and broadly compatible theoretical approaches that share a common basis: the idea that language is an integral part of cognition that reflects the interaction of cultural, psychological, communicative, and functional considerations; that language can only be understood in the context of a realistic view of conceptualization and cognitive processing; and that any theoretical conception of language must be compatible with what is known about neurological organization and function. Topics of interest for cognitive linguistics include the structural characteristics of natural language categorization (such as prototypicality, metaphor, mental imagery, and cognitive models), the explicit characterization of linguistic meaning in terms appropriate to its nature (such as trajector/landmark or figure/ground organization, profiling, grounding, viewpoint, scope of predication, etc.), the functional principles of linguistic organization (such as iconicity and naturalness), the conceptual interface between syntax and semantics, the experiential and pragmatic background of language-in-use, the nature and description of linguistic constructions, the conceptual basis and structural organization of signed languages, the relation of language to thought and to human culture(s), the nature of language in its evolutionary and historical perspectives, the way that language is acquired via cognitive, communicative and general social experience, and the relationship between language and non-linguistic aspects of communication such as gesture. See About Cognitive Linguistics for more on the history, intellectual relations, and assumptions of Cognitive Linguistics. (This part of the site is still being built up as of 2007). Updated 28 July 2007 | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[92]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/memberpages.shtml","2007-10-05","9K","Member homepages    ","",""," Member homepages International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Member Homepages ICLA Member homepages The following list of ICLA member homepages is designed to be a useful resource to find out more about cognitive linguists and in particular, who is doing what research. Many people place links to their work on their pages in .pdf form for download. Browse the list and tell us about your own homepage or other relevant pages if they are not listed here. To send links, please contact the web editor . [The ICLA site does not post email addresses or email links online, to avoid webcrawlers. If your website contains a link to your personal email address, you might want to mask it or otherwise code it to reduce the possibility of getting spammed and phished.] Member homepages Ben Bergen Lera Boroditsky Paul Chilton Alan Cienki Steven Clancy Bill Croft Hubert Cuyckens Ewa Dabrowska Vyv Evans Gilles Fauconnier Ad Foolen Dirk Geeraerts Cliff Goddard Joseph Goguen Adele Goldberg Stefan Th. Gries Marcin Grygiel Peter Harder Joe Hilferty Martin Hilpert Harry Howard Dick Hudson Gerhard van Huyssteen Olaf Jäkel Laura Janda Theo Janssen Christopher Johnson Suzanne Kemmer George Lakoff Ronald Langacker Maarten Lemmens Ulrike Luedtke Dominik Lukeš Teenie Matlock Geoffrey Nathan John Newman Gary Palmer Klaus Panther Carita Paradis Fey Parrill Esther Pascual Stéphanie Pourcel Günter Radden Gisela Redeker Sally Rice Stéphane Robert Farzad Sharifian Chris Sinha Dan Slobin Eve Sweetser Dan Strack Leonard Talmy Michael Tomasello David Tuggy Mark Turner Arie Verhagen Marjolijn Verspoor Daniel Wiechmann Sherman Wilcox Maggie Winters David A. Zubin Updated 18 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[93]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/bookreviews.shtml","2007-10-05","26K","International Cognitive Linguistics Association Book Reviews    ","",""," International Cognitive Linguistics Association Book Reviews International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : ICLA book reviews ICLA book reviewsOnline reviews list, Reviews commissioned, Call for reviews, Books available for review Online reviews On this site, the ICLA presents original reviews of new works in Cognitive Linguistics. Check back frequently, as we are adding reviews regularly. To read the reviews, click on the titles below. Andreas Langlotz. 2006. Idiomatic Creativity: A Cognitive Linguistic Model of Idiom-Representations and Idiom-Variation in English. Amsterdam and Phildelphia: John Benjamins. Vyvyan Evans. 2004. The Structure of Time. Language, Meaning and Temporal Cognition. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Catherine Travis. 2005. Discourse Markers in Colombian Spanish: A Study in Polysemy. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Ray Cattell. 2006. Mind, Consciousness, and Language. London: Continuum International. Ray Gibbs, Jr. 2006. Embodiment and Cognitive Science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Dirk Geeraerts, ed. 2006. Cognitive Linguistics: Basic readings. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Yan Huang. 2006. Pragmatics. Oxford: Oxford University Press. T. Givón. 2005. Context as Other Minds. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Verena Haser. 2005. Metaphor, Metonymy, and Experientialist Philosophy. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Royal Skousen, et al. 2002. Analogical modeling. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Angeliki Athanasiadou, et al., eds. 2006. Subjectification. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Maya Hickmann and Stephane Robert, eds. 2006. Space in Languages. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. William Frawley, ed. 2005. The expression of modality. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. András Kertész. 2004. Cognitive semantics and scientific knowledge. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Richard Watts et al., eds. 2005. Politeness in Language. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Esa Itkonen 2005. Analogy as Structure and Process. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Karol Janicki 2006. Language Misconceived. Arguing for Applied Cognitive Sociolinguistics. (Lawrence Erlbaum) Liesbet Heyvaert 2003. A Cognitive-Functional Approach to Nominalization in English.Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Riitta Välimaa-Blum. 2005. Cognitive Phonology in Construction Grammar. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Vyvyan Evans and Melanie Green 2006. Cognitive Linguistics. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum; Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Michele Prandi 2004. The Building Blocks of Meaning. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Beate Hampe, ed. 2005. From Perception to Meaning. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Etsuyo Yuasa 2005. Modularity in Language. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Greg Anderson 2006. Auxiliary Verb Constructions. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Renate Bartsch 2002. Consciousness Emerging. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Sophia Marmaridou et al., eds. 2005. Reviewing Linguistic Thought. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Adele E. Goldberg 2006. Constructions at Work. New York: Oxford University Press. Alice Deignan 2005. Metaphor and Corpus Linguistics. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Ewa Dabrowska 2004. Language, Mind and Brain. Edinburgh: Edinburgh Univeersity Press. Martin Haspelmath et al., eds. 2005. The World Atlas of Language Structures. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Reviews Commissioned (Titles under review) The titles below are under review for this site. Albertazzi, Liliana (ed.) 2002. Unfolding Perceptual Continua. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Bybee, Joan. 2006. Frequency of Use and the Organization of Language. Oxford: OUP. Coulson, Seana. 2001. Semantic Leaps. Cambridge: CUP. Dirven, René, and Marjolijn H. Verspoor (eds.) 2004. Cognitive Exploration of Language and Linguistics. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Evans, Vyvyan. 2007. A Glossary of Cognitive Linguistics. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. 160 pp. Fried, Miriam and Jan-Ola Østman. 2004. Construction Grammar in Cross-language perspective. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Fried, Mirjam and Hans C. Boas, eds. 2005. Grammatical Constructions. Back to the roots. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Gonzalez-Marquez, Monica, et al., eds. 2007. Methods in Cognitive Linguistics. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Gries, Stefan Th. and Anatol Stefanowitsch, eds. 2006. Corpora in Cognitive Linguistics. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. Heine, Bernd and Tania Kuteva. 2006. The Changing Languages of Europe. Oxford: OUP. 372 pp. Kövecses, Zoltán. 2000. Metaphor and Emotion: Language, Culture, and Body in Human Feeling. Cambridge: CUP. Kövecses, Zoltán. 2005. Metaphor in Culture. Universality and Variation. Cambridge: CUP. Kövecses, Zoltán. 2006. Language, Mind and Culture: A Practical Introduction. Oxford: OUP. Kristiansen, Gitte, Michel Achard, René Dirven, Francisco J. Ruiz de Mendoza Ibanez (eds.). 2006. Cognitive Linguistics: Current Applications and Future Perspectives. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Levinson, Steven (ed.) 2006. Grammars of Space. Explorations in Cognitive Diversity. Cambridge: CUP. Lundmark, Carita. 2005. Metaphor and Creativity in British Magazine Advertising. Luleå 2005: 42. Luleå University of Technology, Department of Languages and Culture. OGrady, William. 2005. Syntactic Carpentry. An Emergentist Approach to Syntax. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Pustet, Regina. 2005. Copulas. Universals in the Categorization of the Lexicon. Oxford: OUP. Radden, Günter and René Dirven. 2007. Cognitive English Grammar.. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Tomasello, Michael (ed.). 2003. The New Psychology of Language. Vol. II. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Vega Moreno, Rosa. 2007. Creativity and Convention. The Pragmatics of Everyday Figurative Speech. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Verhagen, Arie. 2005. Constructions of Intersubjectivity. Oxford: OUP. Wanner, D. 2006. The Power of Analogy. An Essay on Historical Linguistics. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Wildgen, Wolfgang. 2004. The Evolution of Human Language. Scenarios, principles,and cultural dynamics. Amsterdam: Benjamins. Ziegeler, Debra. 2006. Interfaces with English Aspect. Diachronic and empirical studies. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: Benjamins. Call for reviews The ICLA invites authors and publishers to make their titles available for review on this page. Recent publications as well as unpublished dissertations from all areas of Cognitive Linguistics, or other areas of research that are relevant to Cognitive Linguistics, are welcome. We would especially like to see recently finished dissertations reviewed here, as we hope to make this page a place where new directions in Cognitive Linguistic research are made available to a wide audience first. Please do not send books to the ICLA, but contact the book review editor and give the title of your work along with all bibliographical information and a list of 8-10 keywords. All received titles will be listed on this page as available for review. We will only ask the publisher (or author if a review copy is unavailable from the publisher) to ship a copy of the book if the title is actually chosen for review. The ICLA also invites members as well as non-members to choose available titles in their area of expertise and write reviews of 500-1500 words. Please read this statement of Editorial Policy with writing and submission guidelines when preparing your review. Titles available for review The following titles are available for review. If you are interested in reviewing one of these, please contact the book review editor and indicate the title. The book will be sent to you. We constantly add titles to this list. Add your own book or dissertation today! Also, feel free to contact us if you would like to review titles that are not on this list. Bartsch, Renate 2005. Memory and Understanding. Concept formation in Proust’s A la recherche du temps perdu. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 160 pp. Bloor, Thomas and Meriel Bloor. 2004. The Functional Analysis of English. A Hallidayan Approach. Second Edition. Oxford: OUP. 332 pp. Bohn, Ocke-Schwen, Albert Gjedde and Anjum Saleemi (eds). 2006. In Search of a Language for the Mind-Brain. Can the Multiple Perspectives be Unified? Aarhus: Aarhus University Press. 524 pp. Branco, António, Tony McEnery and Ruslan Mitkov (eds.) 2005. Anaphora Processing. Linguistic, cognitive and computational modelling. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 449 pp. Brinton, Laurel and Elizabeth C. Traugott. 2005. Lexicalization and Language Change. Cambridge: CUP. Chafe, Wallace. 2007. The importance of not being earnest. The feeling behind laughter and humor. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Colston, Herbert L. and Albert N. Katz (eds.) 2005. Figurative Language Comprehension. Social and Cultural Influences. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. 360 pp. Contini-Morava, Ellen, Robert S. Kirsner and Betsy Rodriguez-Bachiller (eds.) 2004. Cognitive and Communicative Approaches to Linguistic Analysis. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 389 pp. Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory 1/1, 2005. Edited by Stefan Th. Gries and Anatol Stefanowitsch. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Cristofaro, Sonia. 2005. Subordination. Oxford: OUP. 372 pp. Croft, William & D. Alan Cruse. 2004. Cognitive Linguistics. Cambridge: CUP. 372 pp. Cummings, Louise. 2005. Pragmatics. Edinburgh: EUP. Anne Cutler (ed.). 2005. Twenty-first century psycholinguistics. Four cornerstones. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. 424 pp. Dancygier, Barbara & Eve Sweetser. 2005. Mental Spaces in Grammar. Cambridge: CUP. 312 pp. Dirven, René and Marjolijn H. Verspoor (eds.) 2004. Cognitive Exploration of Language and Linguistics. Second revised edition. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 277 pp. Dixon, R.M.W. 2005. A Semantic Approach to English Grammar. Oxford: OUP. 512 pp. Ellis, Ralph D. and Natika Newton (eds.) 2005. Consciousness and Emotion. Agency, conscious choice, and selective perception. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 330 pp. Gavins, Joanna. 2007. Text World Theory. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Glaz, Adam. 2002. The Dynamics of Meaning. Explorations in the Conceptual Domain of EARTH. Lublin: Maria Curie-Sklodowska University Press. 209 pp. Keywords: lexical semantics, cognitive semantics, network model, dynamic meaning, semantic space, dynamic semantic space, earth, polysemy, intercategorial tensions, intracategorial tensions Globus, Gordon G., Karl H. Pribram and Giuseppe Vitiello (eds.) 2004. Brain and Being. At the boundary between science, philosophy, language and arts. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 350 pp. Goddard, Cliff (ed.) 2006. Ethnopragmatics. Understanding Discourse in Cultural Context. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 278 pp. Gorayska, Barbara and Jacob L. Mey (eds.) 2004. Cognition and Technology. Co-existence, convergence and co-evolution. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 369 pp. Graumann, Carl Friedrich and Werner Kallmeyer (eds.) 2002. Perspective and Perspectivation in Discourse. 401 pp. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Grygiel, Marcin. 2005. Towards a Cognitive Theory of Semantic Change: Semantic Development of English Historical Near-Synonyms of MAN/MALE HUMAN BEING in Panchronic Perspective. PhD dissertation, University of Rzeszow. 297 pp. Keywords: semantic change, semantic development, conceptual blending, panchrony, polysemy Hilferty, Joseph. 2003. In Defense of Grammatical Constructions. Ph.D. thesis. Barcelona: Universitat de Barcelona. Keywords: grammatical constructions, construction grammar, constructions vs. principles, modularity, innateness. Janzen, Terry (ed.) 2005. Topics in Signed Language Interpreting. Theory and practice. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 362 pp. Johansson, Sverker 2005. Origins of Language. Constraints on hypotheses. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 346 pp. Johansson Falck, Marlene. 2005. Technology, Language and Thought - Extensions of Meaning in the English Lexicon. Luleå 2005: 31. Luleå University of Technology, Department of Languages and Culture. Koller, Veronika. 2004. Metaphor and Gender in Business Media Discourse: A Critical Cognitive Study. Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan. 256 pp. Key words: business media, cognitive semantics, Critical Discourse Analysis,language and gender, metaphor, social cognition Kuno, Susumu and Ken-ichi Takami (eds.) 2004. Functional Constraints in Grammar. On the unergative–unaccusative distinction. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 242 pp. Laffut, An. 2006. Three-Participant Constructions in English: A functional-cognitive approach to caused relations. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 268 pp. Lewandowska-Tomaszczyk, Barbara, and Alina Kwiatowska, eds. 2004. Imagery in language: Festschrift in honour of Professor Ronald W. Langacker. Lódz studies in language v. 10. Frankfurt am Main, New York: P. Lang Liddell, Scott. 2003. Grammar, Gesture, and Meaning in American Sign Language. Cambridge: CUP Linhares-Dias, Rui. 2006. How to Show Things with Words. A Study on Logic, Language and Literature. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 544 pp. Luchjenbroers, June (ed.) 2006. Cognitive Linguistics Investigations. Across languages, fields and philosophical boundaries. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Maeder, Costantino, Olga Fischer and William J. Herlofsky (eds.) 2005. Outside-In — Inside-Out. Iconicity in Language and Literature. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 427 pp. Magnusson, Ulf, Henryk Kardela and Adam Glaz (eds.) 2007. Further Insights into Semantics and Lexicography. Lublin: UMCS. [Keywords: semantics, lexical semantics, metaphor, viewing, imagery, motivation, blending, historical semantics, lexicography] Mandler, Jean M. 2004. The Foundations of Mind. Origins of Conceptual Thought. Oxford: OUP. Martín de León, Celia. 2005. Contenedores, recorridos y metas. Metáforas en la traductología funcionalista. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang. Keywords: conceptual metaphor, translation theory, german functionalism, container metaphor, transfer metaphor, path-target metaphor. 280 pp. Meulen, Alice ter and Werner Abraham (eds.) 2004. The Composition of Meaning. From lexeme to discourse. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 232 pp. Paradis, Michel 2004. A Neurolinguistic Theory of Bilingualism. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 299 pp. Pishwa, Hanna (ed.) 2006. Language and Memory. Aspects of Knowledge Representation. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 447 pp. Radden, Günter and Klaus-Uwe Panther (eds.) 2004. Studies in Linguistic Motivation. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 389 pp. Radden, Günter, Klaus-Michael Koepcke, Thomas Berg and Peter Siemund (eds.) 2007. Aspects of Meaning Construction Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Riemer, Nick. 2005. The Semantics of Polysemy. Reading Meaning in English and Warlpiri. XVI. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 487 pp. Ruiz de Mendoza Ibáñez, Francisco José (ed.) 2006. Annual Review of Cognitive Linguistics. Volume 4. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Ruiz de Mendoza Ibáñez, Francisco J. / Peña Cervel, M. Sandra (eds.) 2005. Cognitive Linguistics. Internal Dynamics and Interdisciplinary Interaction. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 432 pp. Saint-Dizier, Patrick (ed.) 2005. Computational Lexical Semantics. Cambridge: CUP. Schalley, Andrea C., Dietmar Zaefferer (Eds.) Ontolinguistics. How Ontological Status Shapes the Linguistic Coding of Concepts. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Schlesinger, Izchak M. 2006. Cognitive Space and Linguistic Case. Semantic and Syntactic Categories in English. Cambridge: CUP. Schlüter, Julia. 2005. Rhythmic Grammar. The Influence of Rhythm on Grammatical Variation and Change in English. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. xi, 393 pages. Schwarz-Friesel, Monica et al. (eds.) 2007. Anaphors in Text. Cognitive, formal, and applied approaches to anaphoric reference. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Semino, Elena and Jonathan Culpeper (eds.) 2002. Cognitive Stylistics. Language and cognition in text analysis. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 333 pp. Steube, Anita. 2004. Information Structure. Theoretical and Empirical Aspects. XXII. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 360 pp. Stukker, Ninke. 2005. Causality markers across levels of language structure. A cognitive semantic analysis of causal verbs and causal connectives in Dutch. Ph.D. Dissertation, Utrecht institute of Linguistics OTS, Utrecht University. 297 pp. Keywords: causality marking, causal connectives, causative verbs, conceptual models, prototype structure, usage-based, converging evidence Tallerman, Maggie. 2005. Language Origins. Perspectives on Evolution. Oxford: OUP. 446 pp. Trautwein, Martin. 2004. The Time Window of Language. The Interaction between Linguistic and Non-Linguistic Knowledge in the Temporal Interpretation of German and English Texts. XXII. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 387 pp. Travis, Catherine E. 2005. Discourse Markers in Colombian Spanish. A Study in Polysemy. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 327 pp. Turewicz, Kamila (ed.) 2005. Cognitive Linguistics - A user-friendly approach. Szczecin: Szczecin University Press. 128 pp. Key words: metaphor and metonymy, vantage theory, complex sentence, cognitive grammar, tense and aspect, discourse, subjectification, polysemy of prepositions. Tyler, Andrea and Vyv Evans. 2003. The Semantics of English Prepositions. Spatial Scenes, Embodied Meaning, and Cognition. Cambridge: CUP. V. Dam, Helle, Jan Engberg, Heidrun Gerzymisch-Arbogast (eds.) 2005. Knowledge Systems and Translation. (Text, Translation, Computational Processing [TTCP] 7) Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 325 pp. Velasco Sacristan, Maria Sol. 2005. Metafora y Genero: Las Metaforas de Genero en la Publicidad de British Cosmopolitan. Universidad de Valladolid. Vogel, Anna. 2004. Swedish Dimensional Adjectives. Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell International. 377 pp. Key words: dimensional adjectives, semantics, Swedish, spatial, antonymy, prototype theory, polysemy, corpus-based, elicitation tests Wierzbicka, Anna. 2006. English. Meaning and Culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Updated 23 Sept 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[94]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/research.shtml","2007-10-05","12K","Cognitive Linguistics Research and Teaching Resources    ","",""," Cognitive Linguistics Research and Teaching Resources International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : CL-related Links Cognitive Linguistics Research and Teaching Resources To suggest links for this page, contact the web editor. Journals Cognitive Linguistics, the journal of the ICLA, subscription comes with ICLA Membership) (Mouton, 1990-) Pragmatics and Cognition (Benjamins, 1993-) Annual Review of Cognitive Linguistics (Benjamins, 2003-) Constructions (peer-reviewed e-journal, University of Düsseldorf, 2004-) Cognitextes, Review of AFLiCo, the French Cognitive Linguistics Association, an ICLA affiliate organization (peer-reviewed e-journal, AFLiCO 2007-) Book series Cognitive Linguistics Research (CLR), series editors Dirk Geeraerts, Rene Dirven, John Taylor, Ronald Langacker (Mouton, 1990-) Human Cognitive Processing (HCP), series editors Marcelo Dascal, Ray Gibbs, and Jan Nuyts (Benjamins, 1998-) Cognitive Linguistics in Practice (CLiP), executive editor, Günter Radden (Benjamins, 2004-) Constructional Approaches to Language, series editors Miriam Fried, Jan-Ola Østman (Benjamins, 2004-) Language, Context, and Cognition, series editor Anita Steube (Mouton, 2004-) The Expression of Cognitive Categories (ECC), series editors Wolfgang Klein, Stephen Levinson (Mouton, 2006-) Applications of Cognitive Linguistics, series editors Gitte Kristiansen, Michel Achard, Rene Dirven, Francisco J. Ruiz de Mendoza (Mouton, 2006-) Advances in Cognitive Linguistics, series editors Vyv Evans, Ben Bergen, and Jørg Zinken (Equinox, first title forthcoming 2007) Essays: Overviews and sketches of Cognitive Linguistics ideas The Cognitive Approach to Natural Language, by Günter Radden. In 30 Years of Linguistic Evolution, ed. by Martin Pütz, (Benjamins, 1992, updated online version in preparation) Introduction to methods and generalizations, by Gilles Fauconnier. Online 1999 version of article published in Theo Janssen and Gisela Redeker, eds., Scope and Foundations of Cognitive Linguistics, CLR 15 (Mouton, 1997) Introduction: Usage-based approaches to language, by Suzanne Kemmer and Michael Barlow. In Usage-Based Models of Language, ed. by Michael Barlow and Suzanne Kemmer (CSLI, 2000, link to online version to come) Cognitive Linguistics by Laura Janda (.pdf download, originally written 2000, updated 2006) Cognitive Linguistics readers Cognitive Linguistics: Basic Readings, ed. by Dirk Geeraerts (2006, Mouton) The Cognitive Linguistics Reader, ed. by Vyv Evans, Ben Bergen, and Jørg Zinken (forthcoming July 2007, Equinox) Cognitive Linguistics textbooks Cognitive Linguistics: An Introduction, David Lee (2002, Oxford UP) Cognitive Grammar, John Taylor (2002, Oxford UP) Cognitive Linguistics, William Croft and D. Alan Cruse (2004, Cambridge UP) Cognitive Linguistics: An Introduction, Vyvyan Evans and Melanie Green (2006, Edinburgh UP) Cognitive Linguistics reference works Handbook of Cognitive Linguistics, ed. by Dirk Geeraerts and Hubert Cuyckens. (appearing Sept. 2007, Oxford UP) A Glossary of Cognitive Linguistics, by Vyvyan Evans (due out December 2007, Univ. of Utah Press) Bibliographies Cognitive Linguistics Bibliography (CogBib), (CD, Mouton 2005, free with Cognitive Linguistics subscription/ICLA membership) Bibliography of Metaphor and Metonymy (MetBib), (online subscription, Benjamins 2007, special offer for ICLA members) Cognitive Linguistics: An Introductory Bibliography, an annotated online bibliography of CL by Dick Hudson, 2000 Bibliography of Cognitive Linguistics Analyses of Slavic Data, compiled by Laura Janda and Ljiljana Saric (.pdf download) Updated version of above (.pdf download) Volumes explicitly about usage-based linguistics Barlow, Michael, and Suzanne Kemmer, eds. 2000. Usage-Based Models of Language. Stanford: CSLI Publications. Bybee, Joan. 2001. Phonology and Language Use. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (Cambridge Studies in Linguistics 94). Bybee, Joan, and Paul Hopper, eds. 2001. Frequency and the Emergence of Linguistic Structure. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. (Typological Studies in Language 45.) Mukherjee, Joybrato. 2005. English Ditransitive Verbs: Aspects of Theory, Description and a Usage-Based Model. (Language and Computers 53.) Amsterdam, New York: Rodopi. Tomasello, Michael. 2003. Constructing a Language: A Usage-Based Theory of Language Acquisition. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. Resource sites relevant to Cognitive Linguistics Conceptual Blending, online bibliography on The Infography, expert-refereed knowledge site Center for the Cognitive Science of Metaphor Online, University of Oregon Metaphor and Metonymy Abstracts, University of Leeds The Conceptual Metaphor Home Page, George Lakoff CogWeb, communication, cognition and cultural studies, UCLA Mental Space Lab, University of Southern Denmark The Center for Semiotics, Aarhus University Links to related theories Neural Theory of Language, George Lakoff Blending and Conceptual Integration, Mark Turner FrameNet, Charles Fillmore Construction Grammar Berkeley Construction Grammar, Charles Fillmore and Paul Kay (1997) Neurocognitive Linguistics, Sydney Lamb Word Grammar, Dick Hudson Updated 22 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[95]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/study.shtml","2007-10-05","9K","Study Cognitive Linguistics    ","",""," Study Cognitive Linguistics International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : CL-related Links Study Cognitive Linguistics There are large number of institutions throughout the world that employ researchers who actively pursue Cognitive Linguistics research programs. Many of these institutions have degree programs in which students can study and participate in research on Cognitive Linguistics topics, at the graduate or undergraduate level. We are collecting links to such programs here. If your program is not listed, please send information to the Web Editor. It should be noted that institutions vary as to how much a student can specialize in Cognitive Linguistics (as opposed to pursuing a broader course of study including other areas of Linguistics, Language Studies, Psychology, Cognitive Sciences etc.). For this reason, individual programs should be investigated in detail when applying for courses of study. Institutions (in alphabetical order by university) Aarhus University (Denmark) M.A. in Cognitive Semiotics Cornell University (Ithaca, New York, USA), Ph.D. in Psychology, with dissertation research in experimental cognitive linguistics Gallaudet University (Washington D.C., USA) Ph.D., M.A. in Linguistics, with concentration on sign language structure [ASL is the language of instruction] Contact: Deborah Chen Pichler (deborah.pichler AT gallaudet.edu) Kobe University (Japan) M.A. and Ph.D. in Linguistics Lund University (Sweden) Ph.D. in Linguistics Rice University (Houston Texas, USA) Ph.D., B.A. in Linguistics Universidad de Córdoba (Spain) Lic. and Ph.D. in English Linguistics Universiteit Leiden (Netherlands) M.Phil. in Linguistics University of Alberta (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada) Ph.D., M.Sc. in Linguistics University of Brighton (U.K.) M.A. and Ph.D. in Cognitive Linguistics, M.A. in Language, Communication, and Cognition Contact: Vyv Evans (vyv.evans AT brighton.ac.uk) University at Buffalo (New York, USA) Ph.D. in Linguistics University of California at Berkeley (California, USA), Ph.D., B.A. in Linguistics University of California at Merced (California, USA), Ph.D., B.A. in Social and Cognitive Sciences with track in Cognitive Science University of California at San Diego (California, USA) Ph.D. in Cognitive Science University of California at Santa Barbara (California, USA), Ph.D., B.A. in Linguistics University of Chicago (Illinois, USA) Ph.D., B.A. in Comparative Human Development University of Colorado at Boulder (Colorado, USA) Ph.D., M.A. and B.A. in Linguistics University of Hawaii at Manoa, Ph.D. in Linguistics (Hawaii, USA) M.A. in Language and Cognition Contact: Ben Bergen (bergen AT hawaii.edu) University of Helsinki (Finland) Ph.D. and M.A. in Linguistics University of Leuven (Belgium) M.A. in Cognitive and Functional Linguistics Contact: Dirk Geeraerts (dirk.geeraerts AT arts.kuleuven.ac.be, Kristin Davidse (kristin.davidse AT arts.kuleuven.ac.be). University of Manchester (U.K.) Ph.D., M.A., and B.A. in Linguistics University of New Mexico (Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA) Ph.D., M.A., B.A. in Linguistics University of Oregon (Eugene, Oregon, USA), Ph.D., M.A., and B.A. in Linguistics University of Sheffield (UK) M.A. in Applied Linguistics and B.A.in English Language with Linguistics University of Tromsø, Norway, M.A., Ph.D. in Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Updated 20 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[96]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/cl.shtml","2007-10-05","18K","About Cognitive Linguistics    ","",""," About Cognitive Linguistics International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About CL About Cognitive Linguistics Historical Background by Suzanne Kemmer Cognitive Linguistics grew out of the work of a number of researchers active in the 1970s who were interested in the relation of language and mind, and who did not follow the prevailing tendency to explain linguistic patterns by means of appeals to structural properties internal to and specific to language. Rather than attempting to segregate syntax from the rest of language in a syntactic component governed by a set of principles and elements specific to that component, the line of research followed instead was to examine the relation of language structure to things outside language: cognitive principles and mechanisms not specific to language, including principles of human categorization; pragmatic and interactional principles; and functional principles in general, such as iconicity and economy. The most influential linguists working along these lines and focusing centrally on cognitive principles and organization were Wallace Chafe, Charles Fillmore, George Lakoff, Ronald Langacker, and Leonard Talmy. Each of these linguists began developing their own approach to language description and linguistic theory, centered on a particular set of phenomena and concerns. One of the important assumptions shared by all of these scholars is that meaning is so central to language that it must be a primary focus of study. Linguistic structures serve the function of expressing meanings and hence the mappings between meaning and form are a prime subject of linguistic analysis. Linguistic forms, in this view, are closely linked to the semantic structures they are designed to express. Semantic structures of all meaningful linguistic units can and should be investigated. These views were in direct opposition to the ideas developing at the time within Chomskyan linguistics, in which meaning was interpretive and peripheral to the study of language. The central object of interest in language was syntax. The structures of language were in this view not driven by meaning, but instead were governed by principles essentially independent of meaning. Thus, the semantics associated with morphosyntactic structures did not require investigation; the focus was on language-internal structural principles as explanatory constructs. Functional linguistics also began to develop as a field in the 1970s, in the work of linguists such as Joan Bybee, Bernard Comrie, John Haiman, Paul Hopper, Sandra Thompson, and Tom Givon. The principal focus of functional linguistics is on explanatory principles that derive from language as a communicative system, whether or not these directly relate to the structure of the mind. Functional linguistics developed into discourse-functional linguistics and functional-typological linguistics, with slightly different foci, but broadly similar in aims to Cognitive Linguistics. At the same time, a historical linguistics along functional principles emerged, leading to work on principles of grammaticalization (grammaticization) by researchers such as Elizabeth Traugott and Bernd Heine. All of these theoretical currents hold that language is best studied and described with reference to its cognitive, experiential, and social contexts, which go far beyond the linguistic system proper. Other linguists developing their own frameworks for linguistic description in a cognitive direction in the 1970s were Sydney Lamb (Stratificational Linguistics, later Neurocognitive Linguistics) and Dick Hudson (Word Grammar). Much work in child language acquisition in the 1970s was influenced by Piaget and by the cognitive revolution in Psychology, so that the field of language acquisition had a strong functional/cognitive strand through this period that persists to the present. Work by Dan Slobin, Eve Clark, Elizabeth Bates and Melissa Bowerman laid the groundwork for present day cognitivist work. Also during the 1970s, Chomsky made the strong claim of innateness of the linguistic capacity leading to a great debate in the field of acquisition that still reverberates today. His idea of acquisition as a logical problem rather than an empirical problem, and view of it as a matter of minor parameter-setting operations on an innate set of rules, were rejected by functionally and cognitively oriented researchers and in general by those studying acquisition empirically, who saw the problem as one of learning, not fundamentally different from other kinds of learning. By the late 1980s, the kinds of linguistic theory development being done in particular by Fillmore, Lakoff, Langacker, and Talmy, although appearing radically different in the descriptive mechanisms proposed, could be seen to be related in fundamental ways. Fillmores ideas had developed into Frame Semantics and, in collaboration with others, Construction Grammar (Fillmore et al. 1988). Lakoff was well-known for his work on metaphor and metonymy (Lakoff 1981 and Lakoff 1987). Langackers ideas had evolved into an explicit theory known first as Space Grammar and then Cognitive Grammar (Langacker 1988). Talmy had published a number of increasingly influential papers on linguistic imaging systems (Talmy 1985a,b and 1988). Also by this time, Gilles Fauconnier had developed a theory of Mental Spaces, influenced by the views of Oswald Ducrot. This theory was later developed in collaboration with Mark Turner into a theory of Conceptual Blending, which meshes in interesting ways with both Langackers Cognitive Grammar and Lakoffs theory of Metaphor. The 1980s also saw the development of connectionist models of language processing, such as those developed by Jeff Elman and Brian MacWhinney, in which the focus was on modeling learning, specifically language acquisition, using connectionist networks. This work tied naturally in to the acquisition problem, and with the research program of Elizabeth Bates who had demonstrated the learned nature of childrens linguistic knowledge, and its grounding in cognitive and social development. Gradually, a coherent conceptual framework emerged which exposed the flaws of linguistic nativism and placed experiential learning at the center in the understanding of how children acquire language. This conception was the foundation for the research program of Michael Tomasello, who in the 1990s began to take the lead in the study of acquisition in its social, cognitive, and cultural contexts. Through the 1980s the work of Lakoff and Langacker, in particular, began to gain adherents. During this decade researchers in Poland, Belgium, Germany, and Japan began to explore linguistic problems from a cognitive standpoint, with explicit reference to the work of Lakoff and Langacker. 1987 saw the publication of Lakoffs infuential book Women, Fire and Dangerous Things, and, at almost the same time, Langackers 1987 Foundations of Cognitive Grammar Vol. 1, which had been circulating chapter by chapter since 1984. The next publication milestone was the collection Topics in Cognitive Linguistics, ed. by Brygida Rudzka-Ostyn, published by Mouton in 1988. This substantial volume contains a number seminal papers by Langacker, Talmy, and others which made it widely influential, and indeed of influence continuing to this day. In 1989, the first conference on Cognitive Linguistics was organized in Duisburg, Germany, by Rene Dirven. At that conference, it was decided to found a new organization, the International Cognitive Linguistic Association, which would hold biennial conferences to bring together researchers working in cognitive linguistics. The Duisburg conference was retroactively declared the first International Cognitive Linguistics Conference (see ICLA Organization History). The journal Cognitive Linguistics was also conceived in the mid 1980s, and its first issue appeared in 1990 under the imprint of Mouton de Gruyter, with Dirk Geeraerts as editor. At the Duisburg conference, Rene Dirven proposed a new book series, Cognitive Linguistics Research, as another publication venue for the developing field. The first CLR volume, a collection of articles by Ronald Langacker, brought together under the title Concept, Image and Symbol, came out in 1990. The following year, Volume 2 of Langackers Foundations of Cognitive Grammar appeared. During the 1990s Cognitive Linguistics became widely recognized as an important field of specialization within Linguistics, spawning numerous conferences in addition to the biennial ICLC meetings. The work of Lakoff, Langacker, and Talmy formed the leading strands of the theory, but connections with related theories such as Construction Grammar were made by many working cognitive linguists, who tended to adopt representational eclecticism while maintaining basic tenets of cognitivism. Korea, Hungary, Thailand, Croatia, and other countries began to host cognitive linguistic research and activities. The breadth of research could be seen in the journal Cognitive Linguistics which had become the official journal of the ICLA. Arie Verhagen took over as editor, leading the journal into its second phase. By the mid-1990s, Cognitive Linguistics as a field was characterized by a defining set of intellectual pursuits practiced by its adherents, summarized in the Handbook of Pragmatics under the entry for Cognitive Linguistics (Geeraerts 1995: 111-112): Because cognitive linguistics sees language as embedded in the overall cognitive capacities of man, topics of special interest for cognitive linguistics include: the structural characteristics of natural language categorization (such as prototypicality, systematic polysemy, cognitive models, mental imagery and metaphor); the functional principles of linguistic organization (such as iconicity and naturalness); the conceptual interface between syntax and semantics (as explored by cognitive grammar and construction grammar); the experiential and pragmatic background of language-in-use; and the relationship between language and thought, including questions about relativism and conceptual universals. In this summary, the strong connections between Cognitive Linguistics and the research areas of functional linguistics, linguistic description, psycholinguistics, pragmatics, and discourse studies can be seen. For many cognitive linguists, the main interest in CL lies in its provision of a better-grounded approach to and set of theoretical assumptions for syntactic and semantic theory than generative linguistics provides. For others, however, an important appeal is the opportunity to link the study of language and the mind to the study of the brain. In the 2000s regional Cognitive Linguistics Associations, affiliated to ICLA, began to emerge. Spain, Finland, Poland, Russia and Germany became the sites of new CLAs; a Slavic CLA was based in North America. Currently new Associations are being formed, serving France, Japan, Belgium, the United Kingdom, and North America. A review journal, the Annual Review of Cognitive Linguistics began its run. Adele Goldberg took over as editor of Cognitive Linguistics and continued to increase the journals reputation and prominence in Linguistics. Cognitive linguistics conferences continue to be organized in many countries, to the extent that it is difficult to keep track of them all. The ICLC was held for the first time in Asia, specifically in Seoul, Korea in July 2005. Asia has a now very significant membership base. The ICLA hopes that in the not too distant future, another Asian country will host the ICLC, such as China. The ICLA continues to foster the development of Cognitive Linguistics as a worldwide discipline, and to enhance its connection with its natural neighbor disciplines of Psychology, Anthropology, Sociology, and of course Cognitive Science. References Geeraerts, Dirk. 1995. Cognitive Linguistics. In J. Verschueren, J.-O. Östman and J. Blommaert, eds., Handbook of Pragmatics. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 111-116. Lakoff, George. 1987. Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things. What Categories Reveal about the Mind. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Lakoff, George and Johnson, Mark. 1980. Metaphors we Live by. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Lakoff, George and Johnson, Mark. 1998. Philosophy in the Flesh. The Embodied Mind and its Challenge to Western Thought. New York: Basic Books. Lamb, Sydney M. 1971. The Crooked Path of Progress in Cognitive Linguistics. Georgetown University Monograph Series on Languages and Linguistics 24:99-123. Lamb, Sydney M. 1999. Pathways of the Brain. The Neurocognitive Basis of Language. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Langacker, Ronald W. 1987. Foundations of Cognitive Grammar Vol. 1: Theoretical Prerequisites. Stanford: Stanford University Press. Langacker, Ronald W. 1990. Concept, Image, and Symbol. The Cognitive Basis of Grammar. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Langacker, Ronald W. 1991. Foundations of Cognitive Grammar Vol. 2: Descriptive Application. Stanford: Stanford University Press. See also: Cognitive Linguistics Research and Teaching Resources Updated 28 July 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[97]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/listservs.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","Cognitive Linguistics Listservs    ","",""," Cognitive Linguistics Listservs International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Listservs Listservs for Cognitive Linguistics COGLING-L: E-Mail List for Cognitive Linguists An email list for disseminating ICLA news, queries, and discussions of interest to cognitive linguists. Open to ICLA members and non-members. Cogling-l is hosted at UCSD and the listowner is Seana Coulson. You can subscribe directly by using the web subscription form at Cogling-l. Cogling-l, formerly known as Cogling, was started at UCSD in about 1991. It is archived on The Linguist list archives back to November 1999. Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics A listserv for discussions on empirical approaches and methodologies applied to Cognitive Linguistics. This e-list developed out of the Workshop on Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics held at Cornell University, May 2003. Go to EMCL-L. UK Cognitive Linguistics Association Listserve The UK Cognitive Linguistics Association, founded in 2005, now offers an active listserv. Subscription to the listserv is free and open to all scholars and students, within and outside the UK. To subscribe and receive updates on Cognitive Linguistics news and events in the UK, please go to the UK-CLA website and follow the instructions under the Email List link. Updated 27 July 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[98]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/affiliates.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","ICLA Affiliates    ","",""," ICLA Affiliates International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Affiliates Affiliates Regional, national, or language-based affiliates of ICLA are encouraged. If you would like to affiliate your group, please see the Conditions and Procedures for Affiliation. To maintain the groups affiliation, see the instructions on the same page for How to Maintain Affiliation. The Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Association (AELCO-SCOLA) The Finnish Cognitive Linguistics Association (FiCLA) The Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association (SCLA) The Polish Cognitive Linguistics Association (PTJK/PCLA) The Russian Association of Cognitive Linguists (RCLA) The German Cognitive Linguistics Association/Deutsche Gesellschaft für Kognitive Linguistik (GCLA/DGKL) The Discourse and Cognitive Linguistic Society of Korea (DISCOG) Association Française de Linguistique Cognitive (AFLiCo) The Japanese Cognitive Linguistics Association (JCLA) The Conceptual Structure, Discourse and Language Association (CSDLA) The UK Cognitive Linguistics Association (UK-CLA) new affiliate approved in Krakow Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[99]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/member.shtml","2007-10-05","6K","ICLA Membership    ","",""," ICLA Membership International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Membership Membership APPLICATION FORMS -- The main goal of the International Cognitive Linguistics Association is to disseminate its research findings among its members. Therefore the most important benefit to a membership is the journal of the ICLA, Cognitive Linguistics, which comes with the membership. Membership in the association for 2007 is &euro;65,00 for regular members (plus postage) &euro;37,00 for student members (plus postage) Surface mail postage to countries outside Germany is about &euro;9,60. See postage costs under Cognitive Linguistics for the current range of shipping costs and options. The journal publisher, Mouton de Gruyter, collects the membership fees and remits ICLAs portion to the organization. Membership benefits The journal Cognitive Linguistics Discount book prices at John Benjamins and Mouton de Gruyter A substantial reduction in the participation fee of the ICLC Conferences. To become an ICLA member Use the membership registration form to sign up as a member of the ICLA. Print the form and fill it out manually; then mail or fax it to Mouton at the address on the form. Your membership will begin with all issues in the year you sign up, i.e. joining in 2007 means that you will receive all the numbers published in 2007, for the 2007 price. If you join the ICLA after the first issues of the year have been published and wish a later start date for your journal (e.g. 2008), please indicate that on the printed form before faxing or mailing it. Retroactive subscriptions to previous years issues can also be handled, as well as sales of individual numbers; please contact the Secretary/Treasurer Ad Foolen at a.foolen AT let.ru.nl to inquire. In subsequent years, your membership will be continued automatically, unless you inform the Secretary/Treasurer (address above) in writing that you wish to resign your membership. Special offers See the Mouton de Gruyter site for special offers on cognitive linguistics titles for ICLA members. John Benjamins also provides some discounted prices for ICLA members. Institutional subscriptions The institutional price for the journal for 2007 is &euro;355 plus postage. The institutional price includes online access for no additional charge. (Print-only or online-only subscriptions are available for &euro;328). Institutional subscribers, please do not use this form. Instead, contact Mouton directly at Mouton de Gruyter, Genthiner Str. 13, 10785 Berlin, Germany, Fax: +49 30 260 05 351 . Updated 27 July 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[100]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/events.shtml","2007-10-05","7K","ICLA Events    ","",""," ICLA Events International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : Events Cognitive Linguistics Events; Events Relevant to Cognitive Linguistics If your organization is sponsoring a workshop or conference that has a cognitive linguistic theme or is otherwise highly relevant to Cognitive Linguistics, tell us about it and we will link it. We will post conferences not only of ICLA affiliates but also other organizations, whether cognitive or more general, and whether or not they fit the geographical categories here. Please send your entries (title of conference; web page URL; dates; abstract deadline if applicable) to Martin Hilpert, hilpert AT icsi.berkeley.edu, and we will categorize them appropriately on this page. Cognitive Linguistics Conferences/ICLA Affiliate Conferences International Cognitive Linguistics Conferences (ICLCs). The official conferences of the International Cognitive Linguistics Association Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Conferences (AELCO-SCOLA affiliate; AESLA) Finnish CLA Conferences (FiCLA affiliate and others) Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association Conferences (SCLA affiliate) Polish CLA Conferences (PTJK/PCLA affiliate) Russian Cognitive Conferences (RCLA affiliate and others) German CLA Conferences (GCLA affiliate) French CLA Conferences (AFLiCo affiliate and others) Discourse and Cognitive Linguistics Society of Korea conferences (DISCOG affiliate) Japanese Cognitive Linguistics Association conferences (JCLA affiliate) Conceptual Structure, Discourse and Language Conferences (CSDLA affiliate) UK Cognitive Linguistics Conferences (UK-CLA affiliate and others) Swedish Association for Language and Cognition Conferences (SALC affiliate) Cognitive Linguistics in China Cognitive Linguistics in Central Europe Cognitive Linguistics in Portugal Cognitive Linguistics in Norway Cognitive Linguistics in Estonia Cognitive Linguistics in Taiwan Empirical Methods in Cognitive Linguistics Conferences (EMCL series) Language, Culture and Mind conference series (LCM series) Linguistic Agency University of Duisburg Symposia (LAUD Symposium series) Related Conferences 10th International Pragmatics Conference (IPRA), 8-13 July 2007, Göteborg, Sweden. Special theme: Language data, corpora, and computational pragmatics 4th International Conference on Construction Grammar (ICCG 4), Tokyo, Sept. 1-3, 2006 Updated 24 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[101]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/pres0709.shtml","2007-10-05","6K","From the ICLA President 2007-2009    ","",""," From the ICLA President 2007-2009 International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA : ICLA News, 2007-2009 From the President ICLA News, Board term 2007-2009 Laura Janda (last updated 27 July 07 with placeholder content by the webmaster) ICLC 10 in Krakow, Poland, July 2007 Founders of Cognitive Linguistics honored at ICLA/Cognitive Linguistics Jubilee in Krakow Honored for their foundational roles in Cognitive Linguistics and in the ICLA: Rene Dirven, George Lakoff, Ronald Langacker, Leonard Talmy. Laudationen delivered by: Martin Pütz (for Rene Dirven), Klaus-Uwe Panther (for George Lakoff), Suzanne Kemmer (for Ronald Langacker), and Eve Sweetser (for Leonard Talmy) Next ICL conference: ICLC 11 in Berkeley, U.S.A., July 2009. Organizer, Eve Sweetser Sign Language Interpreting at ICLCs New ICLA affiliate approved in Krakow at ICLC 10 ICLA Membership New Governing Board of ICLA (2007-2009) The elections for the Governing Board took place at the Business Meeting of the General Assembly of ICLA in Krakow, Poland on July 19, 2007. The following were elected: President: Laura Janda Regular Board members: Maarten Lemmens, David Tuggy (re-elected), and Arie Verhagen. The ex-officio members are: Past President: Klaus-Uwe Panther Representative of next conference: Eve Sweetser, Organizer of ICLC 11 in Berkeley CA, USA In addition, two continuing members are: Secretary-Treasurer: Ad Foolen (second half of four-year term begun in 2005) Editor-in-Chief of Cognitive Linguistics: Ewa Dabrowska (a 6 year term begun January 2007, with transitional editorship begun in 2006 under Adele Goldbergs chief editorship). For complete ICLA Governing Board Information see ICLA Board 2007-2009 ICLA News 2003-2005 ICLA News 2005-2007 ICLA News 2007-2009 Updated 9 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[102]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/about.shtml","2007-10-05","5K","About ICLA    ","",""," About ICLA International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home : About ICLA About ICLA ICLA connects cognitive linguists all over the world by organizing conferences, sponsoring a major journal and book series for relevant research, as well as other affiliated publication venues, keeping up a website and email discussion list, fostering regional affiliates, and generally providing a community for researchers in cognitive linguistics and others interested in such research. Because cognitive linguistics focuses on the relation of language to the human mind, including human cognitive and cultural models, it has natural interdisciplinary links with Psychology (both Cognitive and Social) Anthropology (both Evolutionary and Cultural), Sociology, Philosophy (especially via the study of categorization), and indeed, any field in which scholars study conventionalized knowledge systems (conceptual systems) deployed in human interaction. For more about the intellectual underpinnings and history of Cognitive Linguistics, see About Cognitive Linguistics. Members of the ICLA receive the journal Cognitive Linguistics, discounted registration at the biannual ICLC conference, and reduced prices on cognitive linguistic books from our two sponsoring publishers, Mouton de Gruyter and John Benjamins, B.V. Click on the links below to get more information about ICLA. Aims and scope From the President: ICLA news ICLA Governing Board Organization history Cognitive Linguistics and other ICLA-sponsored publication venues ICLA constitution ICLA Governing Board and business meeting reports ICLC final conference reports Policies and procedures Membership Updated 3 Aug 2007 [ jump to top ] | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[103]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/index.shtml","2007-10-05","3K","ICLA Homepage    ","",""," ICLA Homepage International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[104]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org/","2007-10-05","3K","ICLA Homepage    ","",""," ICLA Homepage International Cognitive Linguistics Association Home | Home | About ICLA | ICLA News | Events | Membership | Support the ICLA | Affiliates | Listservs | About Cognitive Linguistics | Study Cognitive Linguistics | CL Research and Teaching Resources | Book reviews | Member homepages | © 2002-present ICLA; all rights reserved. Site admin information and contact     ");
array_files[105]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org.uk/Officers.htm","2007-09-12","5K","UK Cognitive Linguistics Association    ","",""," UK Cognitive Linguistics Association THE UK COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS ASSOCIATION HOME CONSTITUTION OFFICERS EMAIL LIST EVENTS NEWSLETTERS LINKS BUSINESS MEETINGS Board Members President: Vyv Evans [vyv.evans(a)brighton.ac.uk] Vice-president: Ewa Dabrowska [e.dabrowska(a)sheffield.ac.uk] News Letter Editor: June Luchjenbroers [els603(a)bangor.ac.uk] Secretary: Stéphanie Pourcel [s.pourcel(a)brighton.ac.uk] Webmaster: Stéphanie Pourcel [s.pourcel(a)brighton.ac.uk] Regular Members: Christopher Hart [c.j.hart(a)herts.ac.uk] Chris Sinha [chris.sinha(a)port.ac.uk] Gabriella Rundblad [gabriella.rundblad(a)kcl.ac.uk]     ");
array_files[106]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org.uk/Constitution.htm","2007-09-06","4K","UK Cognitive Linguistics Association    ","",""," UK Cognitive Linguistics Association THE UK COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS ASSOCIATION HOME CONSTITUTION OFFICERS EMAIL LIST EVENTS NEWSLETTERS LINKS BUSINESS MEETINGS Current Constitution [pdf] amended August 2007. Constitution [pdf] ratified October 25th 2005.     ");
array_files[107]=new Array(0,4,"http://www.cogling.org.uk/UK-CLA%20business%20meeting%202007%20minutes.pdf","2007-09-06","42K"," Microsoft Word - UK-CLA business meeting 2007 minutes.doc    ","","","UK Cognitive Linguistics Association www.cogling.org.uk ICLA affiliate MINUTES OF THE BUSINESS MEETING 29TH AUGUST 2007 1. PRESIDENTS REPORT The President, Chris Sinha, outlined the mixed outcomes of the Association over the past 2 years. The Association counts many members internationally (235), and UK Cognitive Linguistics research has a rising profile in the international community, but the UK-CLA represents only a small community within the UK. The Association should therefore focus on growing within the UK. Other points mentioned: · the Association has a working website · the Association is officially affiliated to the ICLA · the Association has an active mailing list · the Association runs its own newsletter · the Association is publicised by the LAGB and BAAL · Members of the Association have organised a number of successful events, including international conferences, symposia, postgraduate conferences. 2. ELECTION OF OFFICERS (note that the new board has been active since the closing of the 2nd UK-CLC meeting) o o o o o o o President (exiting Chris Sinha): Vyv Evans Vice-president (exiting Vyv Evans): Ewa Dabrowska secretary (exiting Stephanie Pourcel): Stephanie Pourcel treasurer (exiting Jason Harrison): vacant webmaster / publicity officer (exiting John Sung): Stephanie Pourcel newsletter editor (exiting June Luchjenbroers): June Luchjenbroers general officers (x3) (exiting Ewa Dabrowska, Gabriella Rundblad, Jonathan Charteris-Black): Gabriella Rundblad, Chris Sinha, Christopher Hart 3. JOURNAL Proposal: It was proposed that the Association should sponsor the launch of a new journal with the working title: Language and Cognition. Publisher: Edinburgh UP (or Cambridge UP); Scope: interdisciplinary journal in the cognitive and language sciences. The journal to be identified as the journal of the Association. Possible formula: Language and Cognition is an interdisciplinary journal in the language and cognitive sciences and is the journal of the UK Cognitive Linguistics Association. Decision: incoming President is tasked with establishing and starting the journal. The editorial structure to be decided in consultation with the Board and the publisher. 1 UK Cognitive Linguistics Association www.cogling.org.uk ICLA affiliate 4. UK-CLA MEMBERSHIP Proposal: Membership will be on the basis of either payment of a membership fee (subscribing membership) to include the Journal subscription or payment of the registration fee for the UK-CLA biannual conference. Membership will be valid for 2 years. Subscribing members will receive, as well the subscription to Language and Cognition, a discounted registration fee for UK-CLA events. The subscribing membership fees and a proportion of conference registration fees will be set by the Governing Board at a level that will meet website costs. All paying members and all registered participants at the UK-CLA biannual conference have the right to vote on motions and in elections at the UK-CLA business meeting. Decision: Use this proposal as a starting point for further discussion and development. 5. FORTHCOMING UK-CLA MEETINGS IN 2009 AND 2011 o dates / frequency of meetings relative to ICLC conferences ­ no decision taken o venue and organisers 3rd UK-CLA: proposals are invited subject to confirmation 4th UK-CLA: proposals are invited subject to confirmation o suggestion to organise UKCLC jointly with LAGB meetings o ICLC 2013 in the UK: proposals are invited (ideally before next ICLC meeting in 2009) 6. CONSTITUTION REVISIONS o o o o o article 2 article 8 article 9 article 12 article 16 All amendments agreed and effected. 7. AOB: thanks to outgoing President and to the organisers of the 2nd UK-CLC. 8. NEXT BUSINESS MEETING: forthcoming 3rd UK-CLC to be announced. 2     ");
array_files[108]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org.uk/Newsletters.htm","2007-09-06","19K","UK Cognitive Linguistics Association    ","",""," UK Cognitive Linguistics Association THE UK COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS ASSOCIATION HOME CONSTITUTION OFFICERS EMAIL LIST EVENTS NEWSLETTERS LINKS BUSINESS MEETINGS NEWSLETTER # 1 (edited by June Luchjenbroers) January 2007 FINALLY … a newsletter! and the primary focus of this issue is to give further information about the coming UK-Cognitive Linguistics conference, to be held at Cardiff University, Wales. August 27-30, 2007. Contents: · Information about coming UK-CLA conference · Call for members to contribute to future newsletters. ALERT: Abstracts Deadline = 5th February, 2007 Send abstracts to: ndcl-2@cardiff.ac.uk Greetings to all linguists and language scientists who may be reading this newsletter! The UK- Cognitive Linguistics Association was inaugurated at the 2005 meeting, held at Sussex University, and we are thrilled to be quickly approaching our second Cognitive Linguistics conference on UK soil. The primary themes of this conference include a continuation of the New Directions in Cognitive Linguistics theme used for the first, very successful UK-CLA conference, together with a focus on Cognitive Linguistics, Applied (or more specifically, Applications of cognitive (linguistics) theories and methodologies). This second theme is very current and amplifies the importance of language research to not just describe language in use, but also to relate theory and practice to issues generated in contexts of use. As such, in addition to papers that address cognitive linguistics theory and/or offer new research that supplements our understanding of the cognitive processes involved in language use, we’re also inviting papers that discuss research that applies cognitive theories and methodologies to specific language contexts (e.g., classroom, law, etc.). We’re thrilled with the line-up of plenary speakers who have committed themselves to this conference. They include internationally renowned professors from the UK, LYNNE CAMERON and the UK-CLA president, CHRIS SINHA; from mainland Europe, ARIE VERHAGEN and the current International Cognitive Linguistics Association president, KLAUS PANTHER; and from the USA, EVE SWEETSER and SEANA COULSON. Their areas of expertise include: Metaphor & Metonomy (Klaus Panther); Metaphor in Educational Discourse (Lynne Cameron); Discourse, Syntax, and Cognition (Arie Verhagen); Language, Cognition and Culture (Chris Sinha); Cultural Aspects of Semantic Structure, Mental Spaces, and Gesture (Eve Sweetser); and finally, ERP research and Conceptual Blending Theory (Seana Coulson). Our conference shoulders two other UK Linguistics/Language Association conferences: the BAAL (British Assoc. of Applied Linguistics) annual conference to be held in Edinburgh (6-8 Sept. 2007), and the LAGB (Linguistics Assoc. of Great Britain) annual conference to be held at Kings College London (29 Aug – 1 Sept, 2007). Due to the overlap between our conference and the LAGB conference, we (together with the LAGB conference organisers) have put together a program that can enable persons interested in both conferences to have some measure of participation in both. We plan to finish our conference mid-afternoon on the closing day (Thursday 30th Aug), to better enable persons with their trip onwards, whether to the LAGB conference or elsewhere. The organisers of the LAGB conference have assured us that all Cogling delegates who are interested in going from our conference to theirs can register using the day-rate (for their final day) during which they hope to attract enough cognitive linguistics papers to create a theme session on cognitive linguistics research to appeal to the rest of their delegates. Similarly, we offer LAGB delegates who might not consider themselves coglingers the opportunity to join us Tuesday 28th Aug (i.e., before commencement of the LAGB conference) to offer papers that also address cognitively inspired issues relating to language structure and language use. We also offer these delegates a day-rate registration, for the Monday Opening and the Tuesday, to help make this level of participation both attractive and affordable, as well as facilitate communication between our two organisations. We’ve also made other decisions to help make our conference a little more affordable to conference delegates, such as on our opening day (the 27th Aug.) registration begins from early afternoon, followed by the first Plenary (Lynne Cameron) at 4:30pm. This should enable many participants to arrive on the opening day and reduce accommodation costs. Similarly, as indicated above, we’re finishing in the afternoon on the closing day (the 30th) to also better enable people to move on that same day. University accommodation is relatively cheap, though basic (details will be posted when registration details are available on the net in April). For further details on this conference and how to submit an abstract, go to http://www.cardiff.ac.uk/encap/ncdl/index.html ================================================== Further Newsletters: For future Issues of the UK-CLA newsletter, we would like to invite (future) members to forward to us information to include, such as: (i) publication reviews that members think will be of interest to others (ii) news about relevant publications and topical dissertations that further cognitive linguistics research (iii) news about academic departments that offer programs dealing with cognitive linguistics research; as well as individual members from those departments (iv) news about conferences that may be of interest to members and cognitive linguistics research. If all goes to plan, the next issue should be sent out in October 2007, which will include all/any of the above information that members have thought to send us, as well as news coming from the Association meeting to be held at the coming conference in Cardiff in August. June Luchjenbroers (newsletter editor) Bangor University, Wales UK.     ");
array_files[109]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org.uk/Links.htm","2007-09-06","6K","UK Cognitive Linguistics Association    ","",""," UK Cognitive Linguistics Association THE UK COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS ASSOCIATION HOME CONSTITUTION OFFICERS EMAIL LIST EVENTS NEWSLETTERS LINKS BUSINESS MEETINGS Education: MA in Cognitive Linguistics. University of Brighton, England. MRes in Cognitive Linguistics. University of Brighton, England. MA in Language, Communication & Cognition. University of Brighton, England. MSc in Psychological Research Methods in Communication and Language. University of Portsmouth, England. MSc in Reading, Language & Cognition. University of York, England. MSc in Philosophy: Mind, Language & Embodied Cognition. University of Edinburgh, Scotland. MRes in Speech, Language & Cognition. University College London, England. MA in Language & Communication Research. University of Cardiff, Wales. Other Cognitive Linguistics Associations: International Cognitive Linguistics Association. German Cognitive Linguistics Association. Association Francaise de Linguistique Cognitive. Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association. Swedish Association for Language and Cognition. Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Association.Finnish Cognitive Linguistics Association.Polish Cognitive Linguistics Association.     ");
array_files[110]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org.uk/Events.htm","2007-09-06","5K","UK Cognitive Linguistics Association    ","",""," UK Cognitive Linguistics Association THE UK COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS ASSOCIATION HOME CONSTITUTION OFFICERS EMAIL LIST EVENTS NEWSLETTERS LINKS BUSINESS MEETINGS Forthcoming Events: International Conference on Language, Communication & Cognition, August 4-8th, 2008 Brighton, England. Past events: 10th International Cognitive Linguistics Conference, July 15-20th 2007. Krakow, Poland. 2nd Conference of the UK Cognitive Linguistics Association, August 27-30th 2007. Cardiff, Wales. 2nd Language, Culture & Mind Conference, July 2006. Paris, France. 1st Postgraduate Conference in Cognitive Linguistics, June 2006. Sussex, England. Symposium on Language, Communication & Cognition, May 2006. Sussex, England. New Directions in Cognitive Linguistics Conference, October 2005. Sussex, England. 1st Language, Culture & Mind Conference, July 2004. Portsmouth, England.     ");
array_files[111]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org.uk/Email%20list.htm","2007-09-06","7K","UK Cognitive Linguistics Association    ","",""," UK Cognitive Linguistics Association THE UK COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS ASSOCIATION HOME CONSTITUTION OFFICERS EMAIL LIST EVENTS NEWSLETTERS LINKS BUSINESS MEETINGS UK-CLA Email List To post to the list send an email to: uk-cla@jiscmail.ac.uk To Subscribe: Send Email with subscribe uk-cla firstname surname in the message body to: listserv@jiscmail.ac.uk To Subscribe and receive digests instead of single emails: Send Email with subscribe uk-cla firstname surname with digest no mail in the message body to: listserv@jiscmail.ac.uk To Unsubscribe: Send Email with unsubscribe uk-cla in the message body to: listserv@jiscmail.ac.uk To receive digests after you have already subscribed: Send Email with set uk-cla digest nomail in the message body to: listserv@jiscmail.ac.uk To receive individual emails instead of digests: Send Email with set uk-cla nodigest mail in the message body to: listserv@jiscmail.ac.uk | Website/Archive | Command Documentation |     ");
array_files[112]=new Array(0,4,"http://www.cogling.org.uk/Constitution%202007.pdf","2007-09-06","35K"," Microsoft Word - Constitution.doc    ","","","Constitution for the UK-Cognitive Linguistics Association 1. The Association shall be known as the United Kingdom Cognitive Linguistics Association (abbreviated UK-CLA). 2. The purpose of the association is to promote Cognitive Linguistics at the national and international levels in a range of ways. In particular, it is proposed that the UK-CLA will organise biennial conferences (the first being the NDCL conference, taking place in Oct. 2005 held at the University of Sussex), and to circulate to its members an electronic newsletter. 3. In addition, the Association will support, among other things, contacts and cooperation between its members, the development of research projects, curricula and international graduate and doctoral programs in Cognitive Linguistics, as well as the organisation of conferences and workshops. 4. A key aspect of the work undertaken by the Association will be cooperation between the International Cognitive Linguistics Association, and in particular, other European Cognitive Linguistics Associations. 5. Applicants for membership are expected to support the goals of the Association. 6. The outlook of the Association will be international in nature. Thus, applicants for membership may be of any nationality, and may be based in a country other than the UK. 7. Responsibility for setting up and administering the Association falls to the Governing Board. 8. The Governing Board will be elected by members of the Association for a two-year term or until the subsequent election at the business meeting during a regular UK-CLA conference. The board members can be re-elected for an immediately subsequent second term only once, with the exception of the public relations officer/webmaster. Nominations for these positions can be made by any member by prior notification to the President or from the floor during the Assembly of the Association. The candidates for office should be affiliated with UK-based institutions. 9. The Governing Board will consist of the President, the Vicepresident, the newsletter editor, the secretary, the treasurer, the publicity officer/webmaster, and up to three other regular elected members. There may also be ex-officio members who sit on the Governing Board, at the invitation of the Governing Board. These members may include the Chair of the Organising Committee for the next biennial meeting of the UK-CLA, and the editor of a UK-CLA journal, should the Governing Body proceed with such an initiative. In the case of a tied vote the President will have the casting vote. The quorum will be five. 10. The composition of the Governing Board should reflect a variety of cognitive linguistic fields, languages, and UK universities and research institutions. 11. The Governing Board will be charged with the following: a. maintaining a website in order to facilitate membership applications, and to promote the interests of the Association. e. If applicable, setting and collecting membership fees in order to support the activities of the Association, including a journal, if applicable. f. appointing a suitably qualified editor for such a position, and agreeing terms of appointment ­ in consultation with the publisher. g. organising a biennial UK-Cognitive Linguistics Conference in conjunction with a local organising committee. h. Reporting on activities and developments to the Associations members during the business meeting at each regular UK-CLA conference. i. engaging with and exploring collaborations with other Cognitive Linguistics Associations. j. engaging in any other activities that support and promote the aims and interests of the Association and its members. 12. Proposals for amendments to any aspect of the constitution, or nominations for Governing Board officers will be accepted on the basis of a proposer and a seconder. Such proposals will then be voted on. 13. For officers of the Governing Board to be elected, those achieving the highest number of votes in a secret ballot for each position, in the case of two or more candidates for one post, will be elected. 14. The constitution may be amended by two-thirds majority vote by the Assembly of the UK-CLA membership.     ");
array_files[113]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org.uk/Business%20meetings.htm","2007-09-06","4K","WELCOME TO THE UK COGNITIVE LING    ","",""," WELCOME TO THE UK COGNITIVE LING THE UK COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS ASSOCIATION HOME CONSTITUTION OFFICERS EMAIL LIST EVENTS NEWSLETTERS LINKS BUSINESS MEETINGS Business meetings Business meetings are held during the biennial UK Cognitive Linguistics Conference, and are open to all delegates attending the event. The first business meeting was held in October 2005 at the University of Sussex. The UK-CLA was created at this meeting. The second business meeting was held in August 2007 at the University of Cardiff. Minutes of the meeting are available here.     ");
array_files[114]=new Array(0,1,"http://www.cogling.org.uk/","2007-09-06","6K","UK Cognitive Linguistics Association    ","",""," UK Cognitive Linguistics Association THE UK COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS ASSOCIATION HOME CONSTITUTION OFFICERS EMAIL LIST EVENTS NEWSLETTERS LINKS BUSINESS MEETINGS WELCOME TO THE UK COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS ASSOCIATION The central objectives of the UK-CLA are to develop and promote the multi-disciplinary field of Cognitive Linguistics within the UK, as well as contribute to the research- and event-based synergy currently growing across Europe, and to foster initiatives and exchanges at the wider international level. To this end, the Association organises a biennial UK-based conference in Cognitive Linguistics (see events). The Association also circulates an electronic newsletter (see newsletters). In addition, the Association strongly supports contacts and cooperation between its members, the development of research projects, curricula and international graduate and doctoral programmes in Cognitive Linguistics, as well as the organisation of conferences, workshops, and other relevant events (see links and events). A key aspect of the work undertaken by the Association is cooperation with other Cognitive Linguistics Associations, under the auspices of the International Cognitive Linguistics Association (see links). To become a member of the Association and get involved in its activities, please subscribe to the UK-CLA mailing list. Affiliated to the International Cognitive Linguistics Association and to the Linguistics Association of Great Britain. web editor and contact     ");
array_files[115]=new Array(0,1,"http://cogling.org.uk/","2007-09-06","6K","UK Cognitive Linguistics Association    ","",""," UK Cognitive Linguistics Association THE UK COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS ASSOCIATION HOME CONSTITUTION OFFICERS EMAIL LIST EVENTS NEWSLETTERS LINKS BUSINESS MEETINGS WELCOME TO THE UK COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS ASSOCIATION The central objectives of the UK-CLA are to develop and promote the multi-disciplinary field of Cognitive Linguistics within the UK, as well as contribute to the research- and event-based synergy currently growing across Europe, and to foster initiatives and exchanges at the wider international level. To this end, the Association organises a biennial UK-based conference in Cognitive Linguistics (see events). The Association also circulates an electronic newsletter (see newsletters). In addition, the Association strongly supports contacts and cooperation between its members, the development of research projects, curricula and international graduate and doctoral programmes in Cognitive Linguistics, as well as the organisation of conferences, workshops, and other relevant events (see links and events). A key aspect of the work undertaken by the Association is cooperation with other Cognitive Linguistics Associations, under the auspices of the International Cognitive Linguistics Association (see links). To become a member of the Association and get involved in its activities, please subscribe to the UK-CLA mailing list. Affiliated to the International Cognitive Linguistics Association and to the Linguistics Association of Great Britain. web editor and contact     ");
array_files[116]=new Array(0,8,"http://www.cogling.org./regform.doc","2007-05-31","27K","regform.doc    ","",""," Newly joining members, please print out this form. Print or type the information requested, sign it, and send it to Mouton de Gruyter in one of the following ways. Please make sure all information is complete. Mail: Mouton de Gruyter Genthiner Str. 13 10785 Berlin GERMANY OR Fax: +49 30 260 05-351 CONTACT INFORMATION Last Name: ________________________ First Name: ________________________ Preferred prefix (Dr., Mr., Ms., etc.) _____ Affiliation: __________________________ Address: ___________________________ __________________________________ City: ______________________________ State/Province: _____________________ ZIP/Postal Code: ____________________ Country: ___________________________ Above address is: Home ___ Office _____ Email: ____________________________ MEMBERSHIP - 2007 Membership Status: _______ Student (37 Euros) _______ Non-student (65 Euros) Membership fees do not include postage. Surface postage outside Germany is about 10 Euros. See www.degruyter.com/rs/102_6366_ENU_h.htm under Cognitive Linguistics for the current shipping options and charges. DIRECTORY INFORMATION Area of Expertise: _______________________________________ Lg(s). Spoken: _______________________________________ Lg(s). Studied: _______________________________________ Your website: _______________________________________ If you choose to give your website address, it will be posted on the Cognitive Linguistics website with other members. Email addresses will not be posted to avoid gathering by commercial webcrawlers. PAYMENT INFORMATION Credit Card Type (MasterCard, Visa, AmEx etc.): ___________________ Name exactly as on card: _______________________________________ Card number: ________________________________________________ Credit card verification code: _____________________________________ For Visa, EuroCard/Mastercard: Code is found in the signature field on reverse of card; it is a 3 digit number following final digits of card number. For AmEx: 4 digit number found on righthand side of card front. Card expiration date: ___________________________________________ Signature: ____________________________________________________ Payment by Giro Transfer is possible. Please find all bank details necessary on the invoice which will accompany the journal Cognitive Linguistics.     ");
array_files[117]=new Array(0,8,"http://www.cogling.org/regform.doc","2007-05-31","27K","regform.doc    ","",""," Newly joining members, please print out this form. Print or type the information requested, sign it, and send it to Mouton de Gruyter in one of the following ways. Please make sure all information is complete. Mail: Mouton de Gruyter Genthiner Str. 13 10785 Berlin GERMANY OR Fax: +49 30 260 05-351 CONTACT INFORMATION Last Name: ________________________ First Name: ________________________ Preferred prefix (Dr., Mr., Ms., etc.) _____ Affiliation: __________________________ Address: ___________________________ __________________________________ City: ______________________________ State/Province: _____________________ ZIP/Postal Code: ____________________ Country: ___________________________ Above address is: Home ___ Office _____ Email: ____________________________ MEMBERSHIP - 2007 Membership Status: _______ Student (37 Euros) _______ Non-student (65 Euros) Membership fees do not include postage. Surface postage outside Germany is about 10 Euros. See www.degruyter.com/rs/102_6366_ENU_h.htm under Cognitive Linguistics for the current shipping options and charges. DIRECTORY INFORMATION Area of Expertise: _______________________________________ Lg(s). Spoken: _______________________________________ Lg(s). Studied: _______________________________________ Your website: _______________________________________ If you choose to give your website address, it will be posted on the Cognitive Linguistics website with other members. Email addresses will not be posted to avoid gathering by commercial webcrawlers. PAYMENT INFORMATION Credit Card Type (MasterCard, Visa, AmEx etc.): ___________________ Name exactly as on card: _______________________________________ Card number: ________________________________________________ Credit card verification code: _____________________________________ For Visa, EuroCard/Mastercard: Code is found in the signature field on reverse of card; it is a 3 digit number following final digits of card number. For AmEx: 4 digit number found on righthand side of card front. Card expiration date: ___________________________________________ Signature: ____________________________________________________ Payment by Giro Transfer is possible. Please find all bank details necessary on the invoice which will accompany the journal Cognitive Linguistics.     ");
array_files[118]=new Array(0,4,"http://www.cogling.org.uk/Constitution.pdf","2007-05-15","16K"," Microsoft Word - UK-CLA constitution.doc    ","","","1 Constitution for the UK-Cognitive Linguistics Association 1. The Association shall be known as the United Kingdom Cognitive Linguistics Association (abbreviated UK-CLA). 2. The purpose of the association is to promote Cognitive Linguistics at the national and international levels in a range of ways. In particular, it is proposed that the UK-CLA will organise biennial conferences (the first being the NDCL conference, taking place in Oct. 2005 held at the University of Sussex), and to circulate to its members an electronic newsletter distributed up to 3 times per year. 3. In addition, the Association will support, among other things, contacts and cooperation between its members, the development of research projects, curricula and international graduate and doctoral programs in Cognitive Linguistics, as well as the organisation of conferences and workshops. 4. A key aspect of the work undertaken by the Association will be cooperation between the International Cognitive Linguistics Association, and in particular, other European Cognitive Linguistics Associations. 5. Applicants for membership are expected to support the goals of the Association. 6. The outlook of the Association will be international in nature. Thus, applicants for membership may be of any nationality, and may be based in a country other than the UK. 7. Responsibility for setting up and administering the Association falls to the Governing Board. 8. The first Governing Board will be elected by the General Assembly of registered delegates at the NDCL conference, on 25th October 2005. 9. The Governing Board will be elected by members of the Association for a two-year term at the business meeting during a regular UK-CLA conference. The board members can be re-elected for an immediately subsequent second term only once, with the exception of the public relations officer/webmaster. Nominations for these positions can be made by any member by prior notification to the President or from the floor during the Assembly of the 2 Association. The candidates for office should be affiliated with UKbased institutions. 10. The Governing Board will consist of the President, the Vicepresident, the newsletter editor, the secretary, the treasurer, the publicity officer/webmaster, and up to three other regular elected members. There may also be ex-officio members who sit on the Governing Board, at the invitation of the Governing Board. These members may include the Chair of the Organising Committee for the next biennial meeting of the UK-CLA, and the editor of a UK-CLA journal, should the Governing Body proceed with such an initiative. In the case of a tied vote the President will have the casting vote. The quorum will be five. 11. The composition of the Governing Board should reflect a variety of cognitive linguistic fields, languages, and UK universities and research institutions. 12. The first Governing Board will be charged with the following: a. setting up a website in order to facilitate membership applications, and to promote the interests of the Association. b. deciding upon and publicising details relating to the membership application process. c. seeking affiliation with the International Cognitive Linguistics Association. d. exploring the viability of a journal, in conjunction with an appropriate academic publisher. e. If applicable, setting and collecting membership fees in order to support the activities of the Association, including a journal, if applicable. f. appointing a suitably qualified editor for such a position, and agreeing terms of appointment. g. organising a biennial UK-Cognitive Linguistics Conference in conjunction with a local organising committee. h. Reporting on activities and developments to the Associations members during the business meeting at each regular UK-CLA conference. i. engaging with and exploring collaborations with other Cognitive Linguistics Associations. j. engaging in any other activities that support and promote the aims and interests of the Association and its members. k. to submit to the second assembly of the UK-CLA membership a revised constitution. 3 13. Proposals for amendments to any aspect of the constitution, or nominations for Governing Board officers will be accepted on the basis of a proposer and a seconder. Such proposals will then be voted on. 14. For officers of the Governing Board to be elected, those achieving the highest number of votes in a secret ballot for each position, in the case of two or more candidates for one post, will be elected. 15. The constitution may be amended by two-thirds majority vote by the Assembly of the UK-CLA membership. 16. This Constitution becomes official upon approval by a two-thirds majority of the Founding Assembly convened during the conference New Directions in Cognitive Linguistics, at the University of Sussex on October 25th, 2005.     ");
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