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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260605T121723Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20120501T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20120501T190000
SUMMARY:Quotation: Perspectives from Philosophy & Linguistics
UID:20260608T091351Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Berlin
LOCATION:Universitätsstraße 150\, Bochum\, Germany
DESCRIPTION:<p>There are many varieties of quotation in natural language\, ranging from pure quotation (<em>"cat" has three letters</em>) and direct quotation (<em>"That's ridiculous\," said Mary</em>) to indirect discourse (<em>Mary said that that was ridiculous</em>)\, and including also less well studied phenomena like scare quotes\, free indirect discourse\, and role shift in sign language.<br>&nbsp\; Where philosophers have been fascinated with the self-referential aspects of pure and direct quotation\, linguists have been focusing primarily on indirect reports. Over the past 10-15 years the two traditions have joined forces to study (i) various forms of perspective shifting in indirect discourse (cf. Schlenker 2003)\, and (ii) the ubiquitous phenomenon of "mixed quotation" (<em>Mary said that that's "ridiculous"</em>\, cf. Cappelen &amp\; Lepore 1997). It is becoming increasingly clear that quotation challenges fundamental assumptions about (i) the semantics-pragmatics interface (Potts 2007)\; (ii) the use-mention / direct-indirect dichotomies (Maier 2009)\; (iii) the nature of indexicality and context shift (Recanati 2000)\; and (iv) compositionality (Werning 2005). It is issues like these that will be the topic of our workshop. In order to move the discussion forward\, we aim at a truly interdisciplinary exchange of ideas\, bringing together interested philosophers and linguists from a variety of subdisciplines.</p>\n<p>SUBMISSION:<br><br>We invite authors to submit an anonymous two-page abstract by May 1\, 2012\, for a talk of 25 minutes plus 10 minutes discussion. Submissions should be made via Easychair&nbsp\;( https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=quotation2012 ).</p>\n<p>TOPICS OF INTEREST:<br><br>- the distinction between direct and indirect discourse (syntactically\, semantically and/or crosslinguistically)<br>- opacity\, compositionality and recursion of quotation<br>- role shift and constructed action in sign languages<br>- indexical/perspective/context shifting in reported speech<br>- the semantics of free indirect discourse<br>- unifying or distinguishing the many varieties of quotation (direct\, pure\, indirect\, hybrid/mixed/open quotations\, free indirect discourse\, scare quotes etc.)<br>- modeling the two dimensions of (mixed) quotation (e.g. in terms of presupposition\, conventional implicature\, (not)-at-issue content)<br><br>INVITED SPEAKERS:<br><br>- Regine Eckardt (U G&ouml\;ttingen\, semantics/free indirect discourse)<br>- Dan Everett (Bentley University\, field linguistics)<br>- Stefano Predelli (U Nottingham\, philosophy)<br>- Francois Recanati (Institut Jean Nicod/CNRS\, Paris\, philosophy)<br>- Josep Quer Villanueva\, (UPF Barcelona\, sign language)<br>- Chung-chieh Shan (University of Tsukuba\, semantics/computer science)<br>- Mark de Vries (U Groningen\, syntax)<br>- Dag Westerstahl (U Stockholm\, philosophy)<br><br>TIME &amp\; PLACE:<br><br>- deadline for 2 page abstracts: May 1\, 2012<br>- notification of acceptance: May 30\, 2012<br>- conference dates: Thu\, Sept 27 - Sat\, Sept 29\, 2012<br>- venue: Department of Philosophy II\, Ruhr University Bochum</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Emar Maier;CN=Markus Werning:
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