Skip to content
GLOCALGLOCAL
        Menu
        • Home
        • Information
          • General
              • Introduction
              • Aims
          • GLOCAL Endeavors
              • GLOCAL Conferences
              • GLOCAL Journals
              • GLOCAL Media
          • Structure
              • Internal
                • Administration
                • Central Committee
                • Scientific Committee
                • Reg. Advisory Committee
                • Global Sub Associations
              • External
                • Affiliates
          • Upcoming
              • Calls for Papers
        • Conferences
          • The GLOCAL CALA
              • Introduction
                • The CALA General
              • CALA 2018
                • Round Table
              • CALA 2019
                • CALA 2019
                • CALAbration
                • Speakers
                • Papers
                • Program
                • CALA 2019 CFP
                • Media
              • CALA 2020
                • CALA 2020
                • CALAbration
                • Speakers
                • Papers
                • Program
                • CALA 2020 CFP
                • Media
              • CALA 2021
                • CALA 2021
                • CALAbration
                • Speakers
                • Papers
                • Program
                • CALA 2021 CFP
                • Media
              • CALA 2022
                • Conference Website
                • CALA 2022
                • CALAbration
                • Speakers
                • Papers
                • Program
                • CALA 2022 CFP
                • Media
              • CALA 2023
                • CALA 2023
                • CALAbration
                • Speakers
                • Papers
                • Program
                • CALA 2023 CFP
                • Media
          • The GLOCAL COMELA
              • Introduction
                • The COMELA General
              • COMELA 2019
                • Round Table
              • COMELA 2020
                • COMELA 2020
                • Calibration
                • Speakers
                • Papers
                • Program
                • COMELA 2020 CFP
                • Media
              • COMELA 2021
                • COMELA 2021
                • Calibration
                • Speakers
                • Papers
                • Program
                • COMELA 2021 CFP
                • Media
              • COMELA 2022
                • COMELA 2022
                • Calibration
                • Speakers
                • Papers
                • Program
                • COMELA 2022 CFP
                • Media
              • COMELA 2023
                • COMELA 2023
                • Calibration
                • Speakers
                • Papers
                • Program
                • COMELA 2023 CFP
                • Media
          • The GLOCAL AFALA
              • Introduction
                • The AFALA General
              • AFALA 2020
                • Round Table
              • AFALA 2021
                • AFALA 2021
                • Calibration
                • Speakers
                • Papers
                • Program
                • AFALA 2021 CFP
                • Media
              • AFALA 2022
                • AFALA 2022
                • Calibration
                • Speakers
                • Papers
                • Program
                • AFALA 2022 CFP
                • Media
              • AFALA 2023
                • AFALA 2023
                • Calibration
                • Speakers
                • Papers
                • Program
                • AFALA 2023 CFP
                • Media
          • The GLOCAL MEALA
              • Introduction
                • The MEALA General
              • MEALA 2019
                • Round Table
              • MEALA 2020
                • Round Table
              • MEALA 2021
                • MEALA 2021
                • CALIbration
                • Speakers
                • Papers
                • Program
                • MEALA 2021 CFP
                • Media
              • MEALA 2022
                • Conference Website
                • MEALA 2022
                • CALIbration
                • Speakers
                • Papers
                • Program
                • MEALA 2022 CFP
                • Media
              • MEALA 2023
                • MEALA 2023
                • CALIbration
                • Speakers
                • Papers
                • Program
                • MEALA 2023 CFP
                • Media
        • Media
          • Symposia
            • Symposia
          • Maps
              • LingAnthr Maps
                • Introduction
                • CALA Region
                • COMELA Region
                • MEALA Region
                • AFALA Region
                • SCAALA Region
                • COOLA Region
              • Cultural Maps
              • Language Maps
                • Global Languages
          • Informatics
              • LA Lit
                • Introduction
                • Describing LA
              • Phonology AI
                • Introduction
                • Consonants
                • Vowels
                • PhAI Interact
              • ViMIA
                • ViMIA
              • Shorts
                • MAMAS 101
          • Electronic Media
              • LIAISE
                • Introduction
                • LIAISE Series
              • LAC
                • Introduction
                • All Articles
              • AA
                • Introduction
                • Full Series
          • Apps
            • GLOCAL App
        • Publications
          • Proceedings
              • General
                • Policy
                • Submit
                • All Proceedings
              • CALA
                • CALA 2019
                • CALA 2020
                • CALA 2021
                • CALA 2022
              • COMELA
                • COMELA 2020
                • COMELA 2021
                • COMELA 2022
              • MEALA
                • MEALA 2020
                • MEALA 2021
              • AFALA
                • AFALA 2020
                • AFALA 2021
          • GLOCAL Pubs
              • The JOMELA
              • The JALA
              • The MEALA J
          • Referrals
              • Journals
              • Books
              • Referred Projects
          • Documentation
              • Policies
                • Constitution
                • Conference Proceedings Peer Review Policy
                • Publication Ethics and Malpractice Statement
                • Conference Abstract Submissions Policy
                • Conference Participation Policy
              • Processes
                • Abstract Review Process
              • Style Guides
                • Conference Proceedings Style Guide
        • Global Engagement
          • Academic Projects
              • GAHLA
              • LACASA
              • CHALA
          • Affiliation
              • GLOCAL Membership
              • Terms of Affiliation
          • GLOCAL Space
              • GLOCAL Space
          • Training
              • Academic Training
              • Capacity Building
              • Consultancy
          • Social Engagement
              • GLOCAL In Society
          • Funding
              • Refund Request
              • BRAG Grants
              • FEDER Grants
        • Log In

        Full Program (November 2022) (clickable)

        time

        8:30 am
        –
        10:00 am

        10:00 am
        –
        10:30 am

        10:30 am
        –
        12:00 pm

        12:00 pm
        –
        1:30 pm

        1:30 pm
        –
        3:00 pm

        3:00 pm
        –
        3:30 pm

        3:30 pm
        –
        5:00 pm

        5:00 pm
        –
        6:00 pm

        6:00 pm
        –
        8:00 pm

        Wednesday

        Opening Ceremony

        8:30 am – 10:00 am

        Coffee Break
        10:00 am – 10:30 am

        Parallel Sessions

        10:30 am – 12:00 pm

        Lunch Break
        12:00 pm – 1:30 pm

        Parallel Sessions

        1:30 pm – 3:00 pm

        Coffee Break
        3:00 pm – 3:30 pm

        3:30 pm – 5:00 pm

        Thursday

        Parallel Sessions

        8:30 am – 10:00 am

        Coffee Break
        10:00 am – 10:30 am

        Parallel Sessions

        10:30 am – 12:00 pm

        Lunch Break
        12:00 pm – 1:30 pm

        Parallel Sessions

        1:30 pm – 3:00 pm

        Coffee Break
        3:00 pm – 3:30 pm

        3:30 pm – 5:00 pm

        Break

        5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

        GALA Dinner

        6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

        Friday

        Parallel Sessions

        8:30 am – 10:00 am

        Coffee Break
        10:00 am – 10:30 am

        Keynote Talk 2

        10:30 am – 12:00 pm

        Lunch Break
        12:00 pm – 1:30 pm

        Parallel Sessions

        1:30 pm – 3:00 pm

        Coffee Break
        3:00 pm – 3:30 pm

        3:30 pm – 5:00 pm

        Closing Ceremony

        5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

        SATURDAY

        6:00 am – 6:00 pm

        6:00 am – 6:00 pm

        General
        GLOCAL Privacy Policy
        Code of Ethics
        Policy on Harassment
        Information Circulars
        Standards and guides
        Safeguards and Additional Protocol
        Vital Documents
        Annual Report
        Coordinated Research Activities
        General Conferences and Meetings
        Accountability for Media
        Member Information
        Contact
        Affiliates
        Other Organizations


        Global Council for Anthropological Linguistics

        GLOCAL Unit, SOAS University of London
        10 Thornhaugh St, Bloomsbury, London WC1H 0XG
        United Kingdom

        Copyright 2023 © GLOCAL, All rights reserved.

        • Assign a menu in Theme Options > Menus

        Opening Ceremony

        8:30 PM – 10:30 AM, Tuesday, May 16, 2023

        15 minute introduction
        Description of the SOAS GLOCAL
        Description of publishing and other facts of the GLOCAL CALA
        Description of the conference and two components
        Welcome

        Tuesday Parallel Sessions 1

        10:30 AM – 12:00 PM, Tuesday, May 16, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        10:30 AM:Learning to work in Contexts of Formal Language Socialization: International Experiences and Challenges
        Victoria Kytina (University of Kuala Lumpur)
        11:00 AM:An Ethnography of Rijal Alma, Southwestern Saudi Arabia
        Michael Hadzantonis (Self Employed)
        11:30 AM:Exploring the Multiplicity of Meanings in Southeast Asian Cultural Symbols Portrayed in Raya and the Last Dragon: A Semiotic Analysis
        Adjemore A. Manabat (Mindanao State University – Iligan Institute of Technology)

        General Papers: Text, Context, Entextualization

        10:30 AM:Market Multilingualism: Evidence from the Shop Signages across the Varanasi Shopping Lanes
        Anil Thakur (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        11:00 AM:Laughter in Comic Strips in Northeast Asia
        Yihui Xia (Tohoku University (Japan))
        11:30 AM:Politics of Language: Context in Cambodia, Singapore and China
        Meng Vong* (National University of Singapore)

        General Papers: Narrative and Metanarrative

        10:30 AM:Representation of Women Rape and Ecosystem Destruction in Vietnamese Narratives on American Anti-war from Perspectives of Ecofeminism
        Le Quoc Hieu ( Institute of Literature (IoL), Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences (Vass))
        11:00 AM:Government Communication During COVID-19 Pandemic: The Antiqueño Experience
        Edbert Jay M. Cabrillos (University of Antique)
        11:30 AM:Asia and It’s New Symbolic Rise
        Mitrajit Biswas* (O.P. Jindal Global University)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        10:30 AM:A Comparative Study of British and Chinese Non-verbal Communication in “Are Our Kids Tough Enough? Chinese School”
        Hamzeh Moradi (Nanfang College, Guangzhou)
        11:00 AM:Affective Stance in Unexpected Situations: Cases from Food Reviews in Colloquial Jakartan Indonesian
        Rika Mutiara (Esa Unggul University)
        11:30 AM:Being an Integral Part of Indonesian: Memory of Chinese Indonesian Youth on Youtube
        Daniel Susilo (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara Jakarta, Indonesia)

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        10:30 AM:Sindhi Language in India- An Analysis of the effect of Homogenous Community on Language Maintenance in 3rd Generation Sindhi Speakers in North- West India
        Juhi Rajwani (Symbiosis Centre for Media & Communication, Symbiosis International (Deemed University))
        11:00 AM:Sustaining Folk Arts
        T.Sai Chandra Mouli (Independent Scholar)
        11:30 AM:Contribution of Linguistic Information from Stone Tablet, Antithetical Couplets and Horizontal Boards to Form Image of Cultural Heritage Destination in Malaysia
        Wong Ling Yann (Universiti Putra Malaysia, Malaysia)

        General Papers: Language, Gender, Sexuality

        10:30 AM:Narrativizing the Bakla Queerness: Reading Parlor as a Queer Narrative Space
        Joseph P. Casibual Jr. (Western Mindanao State University)
        11:00 AM:Discourses of Bisexuality and Sex Work in a Thai Series
        Miguel Lorenzo B. Garcia (De La Salle University, Manila; Trinity University of Asia)

        General Papers: Text, Context, Entextualization

        10:30 AM:The Symbolic Discourse of “jiko-sekinin (Self-Responsibility)” and its Semiotic Ideology in Japan
        Toshiyuki Aoyama (University of Tsukuba, Japan)
        11:00 AM:Malaysian Government’s Multi-Vocational Roles: A Conceptual Metaphor Analysis
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        11:00 AM:Transnationalism and Inequalities in Texts
        Grace M. Saqueton (University of the Philippines-Diliman)

        Tuesday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Tuesday, May 16, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language Ideologies

        1:30 PM:Layers of Inequality in Academic Writing Assessment
        Grace M. Saqueton (University of the Philippines Diliman)
        2:00 PM:Malaysian Female Riders: Through the Lens of Online Publications and Magazines
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Nur Amirah Zakaria (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        2:30 PM:Re-presenting Reform: Decolonial Globalization and Language Policy in India
        Bageshree Trivedi (The Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda, Vadodara, Gujarat, India)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Agency and Minority groups: A Linguistic Anthropology of Tribal Communities
        Debasis Patnaik (BITS Pilani K K Birla Goa Campus)
        2:00 PM:Extending on Work on Noh, Zen, and Now: Buddhism and Language
        Kim Rockell (Komazawa University)
        2:30 PM:Revisiting the History of the Creation of Bangla in the Framework of Language Contact
        Razaul Karim Faquire (University of Dhaka)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        1:30 PM:Small’ in Culture: The Cases of Thai and Korean
        Kultida Khammee (University of Phayao)
        Seongha Rhee (Hankuk Univ. of Foreign Studies, Korea and Mahidol University, Thailand)
        2:00 PM:Symbols of Emotional Metaphors in the Language of Food and Beverage Advertisements in India
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi)
        Jyoti Kumari (Indian Institute of Technology, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi)

        General Papers: Cognitive Anthropology and Language

        1:30 PM:Future Tense Usages in Trans-New Guinea Languages: A Functional-Cognitive Study
        Masahiko Nose (Shiga University)
        2:00 PM:The Poetics of Javanese Mantras: The Case of Simultaneous Signification
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        2:30 PM:Conlangs to Natlangs: Closing the Gap through Digital (Re)construction
        Menon Swathi Sivakumar (NIT Trichy)
        Dr. Vinod Balakrishnan (NIT Trichy)

        General Papers: Ethnographical Language Work

        1:30 PM:Am I My Brother’s Keeper? What the Batak Pragmatics of Favor-Asking, Apology-Making and Reciprocate Strategies Can Teach the World
        Teresita D Tajolosa (Palawan State University)
        2:00 PM:Malaysian Undergraduate Japanese Language Learners’ Learning Orientation (Qinghai, Northwest China)
        Rokiah Paee (Universiti Malaysia Sarawak)
        Hairul Nizam Ismail* (Universiti Sains Malaysia)
        2:30 PM:Review on Learning Disability – Aphasia Assessment in Malaysia
        Saeid Motevalli (UCSI University, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia)
        Celine Deanna Wei Ling Chan (UCSI University, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia)

        General Papers: Discourse Analysis

        1:30 PM:Animism in Lord Shiva Songs in Kandhapurana’s Ksdavul Vaaltthu and in his Presence Worship
        Dhilip Kumar Agilan (Independent Scholar)
        Kingston Pal Thamburaj (Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris (UPSI))
        2:00 PM:An Analysis on the Forms and Functions of Code-Switching and Code-Mixing as Communication Strategies Used by Malaysian Japanese-Language Tour Guides
        Roswati Abdul Rashid (University of Terengganu Malaysia)
        Roslina Mamat (University of Putra Malaysia)

        General Papers: Language, Contact and Change

        1:30 PM:Indigenous Language, Migration, and Sedentism of the Migrant Mamanwa in Southern Leyte, Philippines
        Angelie Genotiva (Visayas State University)
        Bethlehem A. Ponce* (Visayas State University)
        2:00 PM:Political Discourse Contiguous with Malaysia’s National Culture Policy
        Mansoureh Ebrahimi (Universiti Teknologi Malaysia)
        Siti Fatihah Selamat* (Universiti Teknologi Malaysia)

        Wednesday Parallel Sessions 1

        8:30 AM – 10:00 AM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Gender and Sexuality

        8:30 AM:Investigating Gender Bias through Gender Markings in College Students’ Essays
        Nuriza P. Jalani (Zamboanga State College of Marine Sciences and Technology)
        9:00 AM:Sexual Discourses on Female Bodies, Androcentric Biases, and Colonial Ideologies (Surveying Some Contemporary Vietnamese Prose After 1986)
        Le Quoc Hieu (Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences)
        9:30 AM:Dichotomizing Women’s Re/Presentation: Textual Inferences and Narratives
        Joseph P. Casibual Jr. (Western Mindanao State University)

        General Papers: Ethnographical Language Work

        8:30 AM:Apologies on store notices during the Covid-19 pandemic in Tokyo
        Yuko Kano (University of Tsukuba)
        9:00 AM:Communicating with Nature: Disaster Resilience Practices among the Talaandig of Talakag, Bukidnon
        Lorena Taglucop (University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines)
        9:30 AM:Exploring University of Antique’s Hashtag Culture on Facebook: The Ethnography of Communication in Virtual Space
        Edbert Jay M. Cabrillos (University of Antique, Philippines)

        General Papers: Text, Context, Entextualization

        8:30 AM:Laughter Onomatopoeia as Role Language: A Comparative Analysis of Japanese and Chinese Comics
        Yihui Xia (Guangzhou College of Technology and Business)
        9:00 AM:The Role of L2 and Cultural Awareness in Memory Recall: A Cross-Cultural Study
        Chun-yin Doris Chen (National Taiwan Normal University)
        9:30 AM:Small and Cute? Small and Bad?: Divergent Semantic Extension of Diminutive Expressions in Thai and Korean
        Kultida Khammee (University of Phayao)
        Seongha Rhee (Hankuk Univ. of Foreign Studies, Korea and Mahidol University, Thailand)

        General Papers: Language and Spatiotemporal Frames

        8:30 AM:Symbols of Spatial Representation across Languages: From English Phrasal Verbs to Hindi Complex Predicates
        Pursotam Kumar (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        9:00 AM:Chronotopic (Re) Configurations in Life Stories of Filipino Domestic Workers in Hong Kong
        Nicanor L. Guinto (Southern Luzon State University)
        9:30 AM:We are at the Center of the World : Conception of “Centrality” in Pre-Modern Geography
        Qing Wang (Beijing Normal University)

        General Papers: Language, Contact and Change

        8:30 AM:Structural Analysis of Persian-English Code-switching and Code-mixing: An Inquiry into Universal Linguistic Constraints
        Hamzeh Moradi (Nanfang College, Guangzhou)
        Liang Gao Beijing* (Information Science & Technology University)
        9:00 AM:Tragic Realities in the Narratives of Washi (Sendong) Survivors
        Merceditha C. Alicando (Iligan Institute of Technology, Mindanao State University)

        General Papers: Discourse Analysis

        8:30 AM:Wayang Symbolisms and Technology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        9:00 AM:Code-Switching and Code-Mixing in Malaysia State Election Campaign Tweets
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Nur Farah Suhada Mohamad* (International Islamic University Malaysia)

        General Session: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        8:30 AM:Lexical Meranaw Variation: A Unifying Link of the Culture’s Ideologies on Identity, Peace and Unity
        Sharifa Khalid Masorong (CSSH, Mindanao State University)
        9:00 AM:Affective Factors Socializing Malaysians into Japanese Cultural patterns
        Rokiah Paee (Universiti Malaysia Sarawak)
        Roslina Mamat (Universiti Putra Malaysia)

        10:30 AM – 12:00 PM, Thursday, November 3, 2022

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7
        • Rm 8
        • Rm 9

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:Language is Culture on Intercultural Communication
        Fatiha Guessabi (University of Bechar-Algeria)
        2:00 PM:The Role of Fingerspelling in Saudi Arabian Deaf Education
        Ahmed Alzahrani (Majmaah University, Saudi Arabia)

        General Papers: Language Ideologies

        1:30 PM:Racing Dominicans in Spain: The Construction of Language and Race among Dominican Immigrants and Spaniards in Public Discourse
        Juan R. Valdez (Independent Scholar)
        2:00 PM:Puro, Jondo and Por Derecho: Shifting Linguistic Practices of Flamenco Communities in Spain
        Marta Wieczorek (Zayed University, Dubai, United Arab Emirates)
        2:30 PM:“Poder utilizar la lengua propia es un derecho fundamental”: Language Ideologies in El Procés Trial, in Catalonia and in Spain
        Marina Carcamo Garcia (University of Arizona, U.S.)

        General Papers: Ethnographical Language Work

        1:30 PM:He Taiao He Tinana – E Rua e Rua: The Environment and the Body – One and the Same
        Hone Morris (Massey University, New Zealand)
        2:00 PM:A Linguistic Ethnographic Approach To Everyday Interactions Between The Local and Refugee Women In A Turkish Town
        Hasret Saygi (Maltepe University, Turkey)

         

        General Papers: Language and Spatiotemporal Frames

        1:30 PM:Liminality, Metaphor and Place in the Farming Landscape of Tinos: The Village of Kampos
        Maria Vidali (College Year Athens)
        2:00 PM:Contested Boundaries and Language Variants in a Balkan Capital City
        Grace E. Fielder (University of Arizona, U.S.)
        2:30 PM:Cross-Linguistic Influence in the Acquisition of Spatial Prepositions by The Albanian Learners of English As FL
        Daniela-Carmen Stoica (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)
        Anyla Saraçi (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)

        General Papers: Narrative and Metanarrative

        1:30 PM:The emergence of the post-narrativity in the era of artificial intelligence: A non-anthropocentric cybersemiotics of literary machines
        Sung-Do Kim (Korea University, South Korea)
        Jin-Young Lee (Korea University, South Korea)
        2:00 PM:Memory shaping in migration age: Amal’s walking
        Vildan Mahmutoglu (Galatasaray University, Turkey)
        2:30 PM:Recalibrating Narratives of the Jewish Holocaust
        Nicole Scott (SAOS GLOCAL)

        General Papers: Language Documentation

        1:30 PM:Linguistic Landscape as a source for minority language studies. Case of Greko
        Karolina Gortych-Michalak (Adami Mickiewicz University, Poland)
        2:00 PM:Iliad’s Achilles: A Libyco-Berber Patronymic?
        Valeria Argiolas (INALCO University, France)

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Endangered Languages: Modern Mansi Research
        Natalia Koshelyuk (National Research Tomsk State University, Russia)
        2:00 PM:Conceptual Personification of Abstract Notions in the English-Language News Discourse
        Marina Sazonova (Moscow State Linguistic University, Russia)

        Colloquium:Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 AM:Reflections of Christianity in Popular Names of Plants in Albanian and Romanian Languages
        Anyla Saraçi (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)
        Daniela-Carmen Stoica (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)
        Robert Damo (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)

        Colloquium: Oral heritage

        1:30 AM:Language, identity and militantism in contemporary Corsica. An investigation from a tradition of improvised singing called “chjam’è rispondi”.
        Giovanni Ragni| (Università di Corsica Pasquale Paoli|, France)

        Wednesday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:The Seasonal Calendar of the Bateq Indigenous in West Malaysia
        Roshidah Hassan (Universiti Malaya)
        Siti Zaidah Zainuddin* (Universiti Malaya)
        2:00 PM:Contestation of English and Arabic in the Building of Pesantren Culture in Indonesia
        Salimah Salimah (Universitas Airlangga)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Linguistic landscape of the Varanasi city: An initial sketch
        Anil Thakur (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Sanjukta Ghosh (IIT (BHU), Varanasi)
        2:00 PM:East Asians Accepted: The Sociolinguistic Evolution of Language Affecting How East Asian People Perceive Themselves and are Perceived by Others
        Benjamin Duke (University College London, United Kingdom)
        2:30 PM:Review on Learning Disability Interventions for Aphasia in Malaysia
        Celine Deanna Chan Wei Ling Chan (UCSI University)
        Saeid Motevalli (UCSI University)

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Language Evolution: An NCT And Conlang Framework
        Menon Swathi Sivakumar (NIT Trichy)
        Vinod Balakrishnan (NIT Trichy)
        2:00 PM:The Socialization of Local Identity to Global Context: Translingual and Transcultural Phenomena among TikTok Users
        Layli Hamida (Unviersitas Airlangga)
        2:30 PM:Çilapulapu as First Filipino Hero: Symbolic Transformation from Colonial History to Post-Colonial Commemoration During the COVID-19 Pandemic
        Christina Alexandra Guzman Morales (University of Asia and the Pacific)

        General Papers: Discourse Analysis

        1:30 PM:Nonstandard English Spelling On Social Media As An Index For Malaysian Identity
        Nur Amirah Zakaria (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        2:00 PM:Discussing Critical Linguistic Anthropology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        2:30 PM:The Symbol of the Ghosts and Devil Characters in the Fairy Tales and its Influence on Modern Vietnamese Social
        Nguyen Thi Dung (University of Labor and Social Affairs Vietnam)

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Anthropological Aspects of Content and Language Integrated Learning and its Current Worldwide State
        Victoria Kytina (University of Kuala Lumpur)
        2:00 PM:Naming Methods of Roads, Streets and Alleys from Chinese to English in the Cultural City of Changsha, China
        Zhou Yin (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        Wong Ling Yann (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        2:30 PM:Environmental Corporate Social Responsibility of Manufacturing Industries Along Iligan Bay: A Discourse Analysis
        Venus R. Parmisana (Mindanao State University-Iligan Institute of Technology)

        General Papers: Text, Context, Entextualization

        1:30 PM:Epistemics of Discourse Marker Nah in Food Reviews in Colloquial Indonesian
        Rika Mutiara (Esa Unggul University)
        2:00 PM:Exploring Compound Word Processing by Chinese-as-a-Second-Language Learners: The Role of Morphological Awareness, Semantic Transparency, and Context
        Chun-yin Doris Chen (National Taiwan Normal University)

        General Papers: Language Socialization

        1:30 PM:The Hidden Language Socializations of for Marriage Immigrants in South Korean: Challenges and Changes
        Kamilla Pak (University of Suwon (Rep. of Korea))

        To be updated

        Thursday Parallel Sessions 1

        8:30 AM – 10:00 AM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language Ideologies

        8:30 AM:Conceptualizing the Language and Cultural Ideologies of the Kadazandusun in Borneo, Malaysia
        Trixie Tangit (Universiti Malaysia Sabah)
        9:00 AM:King of Talk, King of Listening: Backchannel Practices in ‘Tonight with Boy Abunda’
        Franz Erika Arcamo (Mindanao State University)
        9:30 AM:A New Entrepreneur is a Premature Baby: A Critical Metaphor Analysis of Malaysian Supply Bills
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)

        General Papers: Language, Gender, Sexuality

        8:30 AM:In the Gaze of Women: The Social Reproduction of Filipina Migrant Workers represented in Ten Local Mainstream Films in Recent Decades
        Elora S. Francisco (De La Salle University)
        Karlena Ameina B. Saturnino (De La Salle University)
        9:00 AM:Understand the Rape Culture Landscape in the Philippines through #HijaAko Revolution: A Multimodal Discourse Analysis
        Aileen Bautista (De La Salle University – Manila)

        General Papers: Language in Real and Virtual Spaces

        8:30 AM:Dalitisation of Cultural Behaviour: Representation of Dalithood as a Symbol within Educational Curricula and Media
        Sibansu Mukhopadhyay (Government of West Bengal)
        Titas Biswas (Jadavpur University)
        9:00 AM: Jimmy Liao and Affect: A Multimodal Study
        Xiaoyang Qi (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        Roslina Mamat (Universiti Putra Malaysia)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        8:30 AM:Chinese Numerical Proverbs using Semiotic Features to Describe Cultural Elements of Ancient Chinese Society
        He Zongjin (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        9:00 AM:Social Media Posts; Texts, and Images Iconization of Symbols
        Rimi Ghosh Dastidar (Assistant Professor, West Bengal Education Service)
        Shrestha Majumdar (Society for Natural Language and Technology Research, Kolkata)
        9:30 AM:Interlocution and Writing Stylistics in Shopping Malls in Japan
        Kida Tsuyoshi (Dokkyo University)

        General Papers: Symbolism

        8:30 AM:The Symbolism of Brinjal and Plot Number in Malaysian Tamil Folk Songs
        Kingston Pal Thamburaj (Sultan Idris education university, Malaysia)
        Logeswary Arumugum (Teacher)
        9:00 AM:Symbolic Representation of the Past and Present Local, National and Global Developments in the Linguistic Landscape of Goa
        Marta Dąbrowska (Institute of English Studies, Jagiellonian University, Cracow, Poland)
        9:30 AM:From Oppression to Modernity: Positive Innovations in the use of Western Symbols in South Korean Pop Music and Culture
        Michal Schwarz (Masaryk University, Faculty of Arts, Department of Vietnamese Studies)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        9:30 AM:The Ideologies of a New Javanese Language
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        9:00 AM:Symbols and Metaphors in the Marketing Communication of the Advertising Language
        Jyoti Kumari (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi)
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi)
        9:30 AM:Contrastive Analysis between the Yin-Yang Philosophical Concept in East Asia Cultural Sphere and Grammatical Gender in Romanic Languages
        Tak-sum Wong (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University)

        General Papers: Performance and Performativity

        8:30 AM:Expressive and Evaluative Aspects of Connotation in Hausa Court-Song: A Semantic Analysis
        Yusuf Nuhu Inuwa (Sule Lamido University, Kafin Hausa, Nigeria / Universiti Sains Malaysia)

        Keynote 2

        10:30 AM – 12:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Keynote 2: Professor. Michael Lempert

        Scale and the Linguistic Anthropology of Discursive Interaction

        Linguistic anthropologists like to stress how discursive interaction–social interaction mediated by language use–is embedded in its social, cultural, and historical context. In part this reflects anthropology’s long (if ambivalent) legacy of holism and its methodological commitment to ethnography. I argue here that this sensibility is also a response to old but stubborn debates about scale that continue to haunt the study of objects of knowledge such as “discourse,” “conversation,” and “interaction.” Focusing on interaction, I first illustrate linguistic anthropology’s integrative approach to interaction and note how it differs from adjacent traditions such as Conversation Analysis on matters of context and scale. I then turn back historically to ask how and why discursive interaction became scaled as small in the first place. In the US, when the sciences of face-to-face interaction first crystallized in the years after the second world war, many scholars came to imagine interaction as an intrinsically small-scale level of social reality that demanded fine-grained, microscopic methods, methods that often required mechanical recording technologies. Interaction’s smallness acquired a new subversive politics in the late 60s and early 70s, especially as feminist and liberal anti-racist scholars of discourse envisioned “the interpersonal” as a micropolitical domain. They promised to pinpoint patriarchy and racism with the help of recording technologies and faithful transcripts of talk. But these new scholars of the small were quickly forced to explain how this micropolitics related to a politics elsewhere and how interaction itself related to a proverbial wider world. In this talk, I retrace the many troubles that have come from treating discursive interaction as small. I argue that while interaction has no intrinsic ontological scale, this legacy of scalar contestation continues to shape what we think interaction is and what studying it can–and cannot–deliver.

         

        Thursday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:“Binajau Tambacan”: A Morphological Analysis of the Sinama Variety in Barangay Tambacan of Iligan City
        Keven O. Opamin (Mindanao State University – Iligan Institute of Technology)
        2:00 PM:Images and Symbols of the Gypsies (Roma) in the Early USSR
        Elena Marushiakova (University of St Andrews)
        Veselin Popov (University of St Andrews)
        2:30 PM:“Everyday Internet” among Tibetans in Xining (Qinghai, Northwest China)
        Giulia Cabras (Czech Academy of Sciences, Oriental Institute)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Sociolinguistic Aspects of the Linguistic Visuals across the Ganges in Varanasi
        Anil Thakur (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Pursotam Kumar (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        2:00 PM:Sociopragmatics of Translating Tourism Texts: A Case of Spiritual Tourism in India
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (Banaras Hindu University), Varanasi, India)
        2:30 PM:Produsing Press Freedom: Investigating the Mediatization of an Issue About a Philippine Online News Site on Twitter and Facebook
        Brian D. Villaverde (Southern Luzon State University)

        General Papers: Linguistic Landscapes

        1:30 PM:A Relational Analysis of Place Names and Gentrification in Southwest China
        Michela Bonato (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice)
        2:00 PM:Te Hā O Te Tangata; A Discourse Analysis of Language and the Environment
        Hone Waengarangi Morris (Massey University)
        2:30 PM:Framing the Folk in Popular Folklore: Locating Folk Influences in Philippine Creature Urban Legends
        Joseph P. Casibual Jr. (Western Mindanao State University)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Am I Not a Postcolonial Subject?
        Haris C. Adhikari (Kathmandu University)
        2:00 PM:Symbolism in Malaysian Educational Anthropology: A Corpus-Driven Analysis
        Mazura Mastura Muhammad (Sultan Idris Education University)
        Wong Wei Lun* (Sultan Idris Education University)
        2:30 PM:Are Students Becoming Less Polite? Politeness Strategies, Sociological Variables, and Social Practices in Online Communication
        Lorena Taglucop (University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        1:30 PM:Soft Masculinity Symbols in Local Skincare Brand’s Advertising
        Agustinus Rusdianto Berto (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        Oliver* (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        2:00 PM:The Symbology of Plants in Traditional Healing Techniques in Timor-Leste and its Desacralization on Social Media
        Afonso de Almeida (National University Timor Lorosa)
        Karin N.R. Indart (National University Timor Lorosa)
        2:30 PM:Between the East and West: Development of Traditional Eastern and Modern Western Symbols in Korean Pop Music
        Michal Schwarz (Masaryk University)

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:Motivation of Malaysian Undergraduate Japanese Language Learners
        Rokiah Paee (Universiti Malaysia Sarawak)
        Roswati Abdul Rashid (Universiti Malaysia Terengganu)
        2:00 PM:Code Choice in Online Media: The Case of Malaysia Muda (Young) Leaders
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Zuraidar Badaruddin* (Universiti Teknologi MARA)
        2:30 APM:Palawan’s Prime Tourist Destinations’ Tourism Landscapes and Discourse
        Janet B. Oab (Palawan State University)

        Colloquium Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Discussing Linguistic Cultural Anthropology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)

        Closing Ceremony

        5:00 PM – 6:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Talk on the success of the Conference
        Explanation of publishing
        Thank you and prospectus for SOAS GLOCAL CALA Conference 2023
        Questions and Answers
        Good bye and closing

        Closing Ceremony

        5:00 PM – 6:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Talk on the success of the Conference
        Explanation of publishing
        Thank you and prospectus for SOAS GLOCAL CALA Conference 2023
        Questions and Answers
        Good bye and closing

        Thursday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:“Binajau Tambacan”: A Morphological Analysis of the Sinama Variety in Barangay Tambacan of Iligan City
        Keven O. Opamin (Mindanao State University – Iligan Institute of Technology)
        2:00 PM:Images and Symbols of the Gypsies (Roma) in the Early USSR
        Elena Marushiakova (University of St Andrews)
        Veselin Popov (University of St Andrews)
        2:30 PM:“Everyday Internet” among Tibetans in Xining (Qinghai, Northwest China)
        Giulia Cabras (Czech Academy of Sciences, Oriental Institute)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Sociolinguistic Aspects of the Linguistic Visuals across the Ganges in Varanasi
        Anil Thakur (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Pursotam Kumar (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        2:00 PM:Sociopragmatics of Translating Tourism Texts: A Case of Spiritual Tourism in India
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (Banaras Hindu University), Varanasi, India)
        2:30 PM:Produsing Press Freedom: Investigating the Mediatization of an Issue About a Philippine Online News Site on Twitter and Facebook
        Brian D. Villaverde (Southern Luzon State University)

        General Papers: Linguistic Landscapes

        1:30 PM:A Relational Analysis of Place Names and Gentrification in Southwest China
        Michela Bonato (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice)
        2:00 PM:Te Hā O Te Tangata; A Discourse Analysis of Language and the Environment
        Hone Waengarangi Morris (Massey University)
        2:30 PM:Framing the Folk in Popular Folklore: Locating Folk Influences in Philippine Creature Urban Legends
        Joseph P. Casibual Jr. (Western Mindanao State University)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Am I Not a Postcolonial Subject?
        Haris C. Adhikari (Kathmandu University)
        2:00 PM:Symbolism in Malaysian Educational Anthropology: A Corpus-Driven Analysis
        Mazura Mastura Muhammad (Sultan Idris Education University)
        Wong Wei Lun* (Sultan Idris Education University)
        2:30 PM:Are Students Becoming Less Polite? Politeness Strategies, Sociological Variables, and Social Practices in Online Communication
        Lorena Taglucop (University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        1:30 PM:Soft Masculinity Symbols in Local Skincare Brand’s Advertising
        Agustinus Rusdianto Berto (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        Oliver* (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        2:00 PM:The Symbology of Plants in Traditional Healing Techniques in Timor-Leste and its Desacralization on Social Media
        Afonso de Almeida (National University Timor Lorosa)
        Karin N.R. Indart (National University Timor Lorosa)
        2:30 PM:Between the East and West: Development of Traditional Eastern and Modern Western Symbols in Korean Pop Music
        Michal Schwarz (Masaryk University)

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:Motivation of Malaysian Undergraduate Japanese Language Learners
        Rokiah Paee (Universiti Malaysia Sarawak)
        Roswati Abdul Rashid (Universiti Malaysia Terengganu)
        2:00 PM:Code Choice in Online Media: The Case of Malaysia Muda (Young) Leaders
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Zuraidar Badaruddin* (Universiti Teknologi MARA)
        2:30 APM:Palawan’s Prime Tourist Destinations’ Tourism Landscapes and Discourse
        Janet B. Oab (Palawan State University)

        Colloquium Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Discussing Linguistic Cultural Anthropology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)

        Closing Ceremony

        5:00 PM – 6:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Talk on the success of the Conference
        Explanation of publishing
        Thank you and prospectus for SOAS GLOCAL CALA Conference 2023
        Questions and Answers
        Good bye and closing

        Keynote 2

        10:30 AM – 12:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Keynote 2: Professor. Michael Lempert

        Scale and the Linguistic Anthropology of Discursive Interaction

        Linguistic anthropologists like to stress how discursive interaction–social interaction mediated by language use–is embedded in its social, cultural, and historical context. In part this reflects anthropology’s long (if ambivalent) legacy of holism and its methodological commitment to ethnography. I argue here that this sensibility is also a response to old but stubborn debates about scale that continue to haunt the study of objects of knowledge such as “discourse,” “conversation,” and “interaction.” Focusing on interaction, I first illustrate linguistic anthropology’s integrative approach to interaction and note how it differs from adjacent traditions such as Conversation Analysis on matters of context and scale. I then turn back historically to ask how and why discursive interaction became scaled as small in the first place. In the US, when the sciences of face-to-face interaction first crystallized in the years after the second world war, many scholars came to imagine interaction as an intrinsically small-scale level of social reality that demanded fine-grained, microscopic methods, methods that often required mechanical recording technologies. Interaction’s smallness acquired a new subversive politics in the late 60s and early 70s, especially as feminist and liberal anti-racist scholars of discourse envisioned “the interpersonal” as a micropolitical domain. They promised to pinpoint patriarchy and racism with the help of recording technologies and faithful transcripts of talk. But these new scholars of the small were quickly forced to explain how this micropolitics related to a politics elsewhere and how interaction itself related to a proverbial wider world. In this talk, I retrace the many troubles that have come from treating discursive interaction as small. I argue that while interaction has no intrinsic ontological scale, this legacy of scalar contestation continues to shape what we think interaction is and what studying it can–and cannot–deliver.

         

        Thursday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:“Binajau Tambacan”: A Morphological Analysis of the Sinama Variety in Barangay Tambacan of Iligan City
        Keven O. Opamin (Mindanao State University – Iligan Institute of Technology)
        2:00 PM:Images and Symbols of the Gypsies (Roma) in the Early USSR
        Elena Marushiakova (University of St Andrews)
        Veselin Popov (University of St Andrews)
        2:30 PM:“Everyday Internet” among Tibetans in Xining (Qinghai, Northwest China)
        Giulia Cabras (Czech Academy of Sciences, Oriental Institute)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Sociolinguistic Aspects of the Linguistic Visuals across the Ganges in Varanasi
        Anil Thakur (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Pursotam Kumar (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        2:00 PM:Sociopragmatics of Translating Tourism Texts: A Case of Spiritual Tourism in India
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (Banaras Hindu University), Varanasi, India)
        2:30 PM:Produsing Press Freedom: Investigating the Mediatization of an Issue About a Philippine Online News Site on Twitter and Facebook
        Brian D. Villaverde (Southern Luzon State University)

        General Papers: Linguistic Landscapes

        1:30 PM:A Relational Analysis of Place Names and Gentrification in Southwest China
        Michela Bonato (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice)
        2:00 PM:Te Hā O Te Tangata; A Discourse Analysis of Language and the Environment
        Hone Waengarangi Morris (Massey University)
        2:30 PM:Framing the Folk in Popular Folklore: Locating Folk Influences in Philippine Creature Urban Legends
        Joseph P. Casibual Jr. (Western Mindanao State University)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Am I Not a Postcolonial Subject?
        Haris C. Adhikari (Kathmandu University)
        2:00 PM:Symbolism in Malaysian Educational Anthropology: A Corpus-Driven Analysis
        Mazura Mastura Muhammad (Sultan Idris Education University)
        Wong Wei Lun* (Sultan Idris Education University)
        2:30 PM:Are Students Becoming Less Polite? Politeness Strategies, Sociological Variables, and Social Practices in Online Communication
        Lorena Taglucop (University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        1:30 PM:Soft Masculinity Symbols in Local Skincare Brand’s Advertising
        Agustinus Rusdianto Berto (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        Oliver* (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        2:00 PM:The Symbology of Plants in Traditional Healing Techniques in Timor-Leste and its Desacralization on Social Media
        Afonso de Almeida (National University Timor Lorosa)
        Karin N.R. Indart (National University Timor Lorosa)
        2:30 PM:Between the East and West: Development of Traditional Eastern and Modern Western Symbols in Korean Pop Music
        Michal Schwarz (Masaryk University)

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:Motivation of Malaysian Undergraduate Japanese Language Learners
        Rokiah Paee (Universiti Malaysia Sarawak)
        Roswati Abdul Rashid (Universiti Malaysia Terengganu)
        2:00 PM:Code Choice in Online Media: The Case of Malaysia Muda (Young) Leaders
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Zuraidar Badaruddin* (Universiti Teknologi MARA)
        2:30 APM:Palawan’s Prime Tourist Destinations’ Tourism Landscapes and Discourse
        Janet B. Oab (Palawan State University)

        Colloquium Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Discussing Linguistic Cultural Anthropology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)

        Closing Ceremony

        5:00 PM – 6:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Talk on the success of the Conference
        Explanation of publishing
        Thank you and prospectus for SOAS GLOCAL CALA Conference 2023
        Questions and Answers
        Good bye and closing

        Thursday Parallel Sessions 1

        8:30 AM – 10:00 AM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language Ideologies

        8:30 AM:Conceptualizing the Language and Cultural Ideologies of the Kadazandusun in Borneo, Malaysia
        Trixie Tangit (Universiti Malaysia Sabah)
        9:00 AM:King of Talk, King of Listening: Backchannel Practices in ‘Tonight with Boy Abunda’
        Franz Erika Arcamo (Mindanao State University)
        9:30 AM:A New Entrepreneur is a Premature Baby: A Critical Metaphor Analysis of Malaysian Supply Bills
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)

        General Papers: Language, Gender, Sexuality

        8:30 AM:In the Gaze of Women: The Social Reproduction of Filipina Migrant Workers represented in Ten Local Mainstream Films in Recent Decades
        Elora S. Francisco (De La Salle University)
        Karlena Ameina B. Saturnino (De La Salle University)
        9:00 AM:Understand the Rape Culture Landscape in the Philippines through #HijaAko Revolution: A Multimodal Discourse Analysis
        Aileen Bautista (De La Salle University – Manila)

        General Papers: Language in Real and Virtual Spaces

        8:30 AM:Dalitisation of Cultural Behaviour: Representation of Dalithood as a Symbol within Educational Curricula and Media
        Sibansu Mukhopadhyay (Government of West Bengal)
        Titas Biswas (Jadavpur University)
        9:00 AM: Jimmy Liao and Affect: A Multimodal Study
        Xiaoyang Qi (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        Roslina Mamat (Universiti Putra Malaysia)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        8:30 AM:Chinese Numerical Proverbs using Semiotic Features to Describe Cultural Elements of Ancient Chinese Society
        He Zongjin (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        9:00 AM:Social Media Posts; Texts, and Images Iconization of Symbols
        Rimi Ghosh Dastidar (Assistant Professor, West Bengal Education Service)
        Shrestha Majumdar (Society for Natural Language and Technology Research, Kolkata)
        9:30 AM:Interlocution and Writing Stylistics in Shopping Malls in Japan
        Kida Tsuyoshi (Dokkyo University)

        General Papers: Symbolism

        8:30 AM:The Symbolism of Brinjal and Plot Number in Malaysian Tamil Folk Songs
        Kingston Pal Thamburaj (Sultan Idris education university, Malaysia)
        Logeswary Arumugum (Teacher)
        9:00 AM:Symbolic Representation of the Past and Present Local, National and Global Developments in the Linguistic Landscape of Goa
        Marta Dąbrowska (Institute of English Studies, Jagiellonian University, Cracow, Poland)
        9:30 AM:From Oppression to Modernity: Positive Innovations in the use of Western Symbols in South Korean Pop Music and Culture
        Michal Schwarz (Masaryk University, Faculty of Arts, Department of Vietnamese Studies)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        9:30 AM:The Ideologies of a New Javanese Language
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        9:00 AM:Symbols and Metaphors in the Marketing Communication of the Advertising Language
        Jyoti Kumari (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi)
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi)
        9:30 AM:Contrastive Analysis between the Yin-Yang Philosophical Concept in East Asia Cultural Sphere and Grammatical Gender in Romanic Languages
        Tak-sum Wong (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University)

        General Papers: Performance and Performativity

        8:30 AM:Expressive and Evaluative Aspects of Connotation in Hausa Court-Song: A Semantic Analysis
        Yusuf Nuhu Inuwa (Sule Lamido University, Kafin Hausa, Nigeria / Universiti Sains Malaysia)

        Keynote 2

        10:30 AM – 12:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Keynote 2: Professor. Michael Lempert

        Scale and the Linguistic Anthropology of Discursive Interaction

        Linguistic anthropologists like to stress how discursive interaction–social interaction mediated by language use–is embedded in its social, cultural, and historical context. In part this reflects anthropology’s long (if ambivalent) legacy of holism and its methodological commitment to ethnography. I argue here that this sensibility is also a response to old but stubborn debates about scale that continue to haunt the study of objects of knowledge such as “discourse,” “conversation,” and “interaction.” Focusing on interaction, I first illustrate linguistic anthropology’s integrative approach to interaction and note how it differs from adjacent traditions such as Conversation Analysis on matters of context and scale. I then turn back historically to ask how and why discursive interaction became scaled as small in the first place. In the US, when the sciences of face-to-face interaction first crystallized in the years after the second world war, many scholars came to imagine interaction as an intrinsically small-scale level of social reality that demanded fine-grained, microscopic methods, methods that often required mechanical recording technologies. Interaction’s smallness acquired a new subversive politics in the late 60s and early 70s, especially as feminist and liberal anti-racist scholars of discourse envisioned “the interpersonal” as a micropolitical domain. They promised to pinpoint patriarchy and racism with the help of recording technologies and faithful transcripts of talk. But these new scholars of the small were quickly forced to explain how this micropolitics related to a politics elsewhere and how interaction itself related to a proverbial wider world. In this talk, I retrace the many troubles that have come from treating discursive interaction as small. I argue that while interaction has no intrinsic ontological scale, this legacy of scalar contestation continues to shape what we think interaction is and what studying it can–and cannot–deliver.

         

        Thursday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:“Binajau Tambacan”: A Morphological Analysis of the Sinama Variety in Barangay Tambacan of Iligan City
        Keven O. Opamin (Mindanao State University – Iligan Institute of Technology)
        2:00 PM:Images and Symbols of the Gypsies (Roma) in the Early USSR
        Elena Marushiakova (University of St Andrews)
        Veselin Popov (University of St Andrews)
        2:30 PM:“Everyday Internet” among Tibetans in Xining (Qinghai, Northwest China)
        Giulia Cabras (Czech Academy of Sciences, Oriental Institute)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Sociolinguistic Aspects of the Linguistic Visuals across the Ganges in Varanasi
        Anil Thakur (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Pursotam Kumar (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        2:00 PM:Sociopragmatics of Translating Tourism Texts: A Case of Spiritual Tourism in India
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (Banaras Hindu University), Varanasi, India)
        2:30 PM:Produsing Press Freedom: Investigating the Mediatization of an Issue About a Philippine Online News Site on Twitter and Facebook
        Brian D. Villaverde (Southern Luzon State University)

        General Papers: Linguistic Landscapes

        1:30 PM:A Relational Analysis of Place Names and Gentrification in Southwest China
        Michela Bonato (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice)
        2:00 PM:Te Hā O Te Tangata; A Discourse Analysis of Language and the Environment
        Hone Waengarangi Morris (Massey University)
        2:30 PM:Framing the Folk in Popular Folklore: Locating Folk Influences in Philippine Creature Urban Legends
        Joseph P. Casibual Jr. (Western Mindanao State University)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Am I Not a Postcolonial Subject?
        Haris C. Adhikari (Kathmandu University)
        2:00 PM:Symbolism in Malaysian Educational Anthropology: A Corpus-Driven Analysis
        Mazura Mastura Muhammad (Sultan Idris Education University)
        Wong Wei Lun* (Sultan Idris Education University)
        2:30 PM:Are Students Becoming Less Polite? Politeness Strategies, Sociological Variables, and Social Practices in Online Communication
        Lorena Taglucop (University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        1:30 PM:Soft Masculinity Symbols in Local Skincare Brand’s Advertising
        Agustinus Rusdianto Berto (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        Oliver* (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        2:00 PM:The Symbology of Plants in Traditional Healing Techniques in Timor-Leste and its Desacralization on Social Media
        Afonso de Almeida (National University Timor Lorosa)
        Karin N.R. Indart (National University Timor Lorosa)
        2:30 PM:Between the East and West: Development of Traditional Eastern and Modern Western Symbols in Korean Pop Music
        Michal Schwarz (Masaryk University)

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:Motivation of Malaysian Undergraduate Japanese Language Learners
        Rokiah Paee (Universiti Malaysia Sarawak)
        Roswati Abdul Rashid (Universiti Malaysia Terengganu)
        2:00 PM:Code Choice in Online Media: The Case of Malaysia Muda (Young) Leaders
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Zuraidar Badaruddin* (Universiti Teknologi MARA)
        2:30 APM:Palawan’s Prime Tourist Destinations’ Tourism Landscapes and Discourse
        Janet B. Oab (Palawan State University)

        Colloquium Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Discussing Linguistic Cultural Anthropology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)

        Closing Ceremony

        5:00 PM – 6:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Talk on the success of the Conference
        Explanation of publishing
        Thank you and prospectus for SOAS GLOCAL CALA Conference 2023
        Questions and Answers
        Good bye and closing

        To be updated

        Thursday Parallel Sessions 1

        8:30 AM – 10:00 AM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language Ideologies

        8:30 AM:Conceptualizing the Language and Cultural Ideologies of the Kadazandusun in Borneo, Malaysia
        Trixie Tangit (Universiti Malaysia Sabah)
        9:00 AM:King of Talk, King of Listening: Backchannel Practices in ‘Tonight with Boy Abunda’
        Franz Erika Arcamo (Mindanao State University)
        9:30 AM:A New Entrepreneur is a Premature Baby: A Critical Metaphor Analysis of Malaysian Supply Bills
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)

        General Papers: Language, Gender, Sexuality

        8:30 AM:In the Gaze of Women: The Social Reproduction of Filipina Migrant Workers represented in Ten Local Mainstream Films in Recent Decades
        Elora S. Francisco (De La Salle University)
        Karlena Ameina B. Saturnino (De La Salle University)
        9:00 AM:Understand the Rape Culture Landscape in the Philippines through #HijaAko Revolution: A Multimodal Discourse Analysis
        Aileen Bautista (De La Salle University – Manila)

        General Papers: Language in Real and Virtual Spaces

        8:30 AM:Dalitisation of Cultural Behaviour: Representation of Dalithood as a Symbol within Educational Curricula and Media
        Sibansu Mukhopadhyay (Government of West Bengal)
        Titas Biswas (Jadavpur University)
        9:00 AM: Jimmy Liao and Affect: A Multimodal Study
        Xiaoyang Qi (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        Roslina Mamat (Universiti Putra Malaysia)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        8:30 AM:Chinese Numerical Proverbs using Semiotic Features to Describe Cultural Elements of Ancient Chinese Society
        He Zongjin (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        9:00 AM:Social Media Posts; Texts, and Images Iconization of Symbols
        Rimi Ghosh Dastidar (Assistant Professor, West Bengal Education Service)
        Shrestha Majumdar (Society for Natural Language and Technology Research, Kolkata)
        9:30 AM:Interlocution and Writing Stylistics in Shopping Malls in Japan
        Kida Tsuyoshi (Dokkyo University)

        General Papers: Symbolism

        8:30 AM:The Symbolism of Brinjal and Plot Number in Malaysian Tamil Folk Songs
        Kingston Pal Thamburaj (Sultan Idris education university, Malaysia)
        Logeswary Arumugum (Teacher)
        9:00 AM:Symbolic Representation of the Past and Present Local, National and Global Developments in the Linguistic Landscape of Goa
        Marta Dąbrowska (Institute of English Studies, Jagiellonian University, Cracow, Poland)
        9:30 AM:From Oppression to Modernity: Positive Innovations in the use of Western Symbols in South Korean Pop Music and Culture
        Michal Schwarz (Masaryk University, Faculty of Arts, Department of Vietnamese Studies)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        9:30 AM:The Ideologies of a New Javanese Language
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        9:00 AM:Symbols and Metaphors in the Marketing Communication of the Advertising Language
        Jyoti Kumari (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi)
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi)
        9:30 AM:Contrastive Analysis between the Yin-Yang Philosophical Concept in East Asia Cultural Sphere and Grammatical Gender in Romanic Languages
        Tak-sum Wong (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University)

        General Papers: Performance and Performativity

        8:30 AM:Expressive and Evaluative Aspects of Connotation in Hausa Court-Song: A Semantic Analysis
        Yusuf Nuhu Inuwa (Sule Lamido University, Kafin Hausa, Nigeria / Universiti Sains Malaysia)

        Keynote 2

        10:30 AM – 12:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Keynote 2: Professor. Michael Lempert

        Scale and the Linguistic Anthropology of Discursive Interaction

        Linguistic anthropologists like to stress how discursive interaction–social interaction mediated by language use–is embedded in its social, cultural, and historical context. In part this reflects anthropology’s long (if ambivalent) legacy of holism and its methodological commitment to ethnography. I argue here that this sensibility is also a response to old but stubborn debates about scale that continue to haunt the study of objects of knowledge such as “discourse,” “conversation,” and “interaction.” Focusing on interaction, I first illustrate linguistic anthropology’s integrative approach to interaction and note how it differs from adjacent traditions such as Conversation Analysis on matters of context and scale. I then turn back historically to ask how and why discursive interaction became scaled as small in the first place. In the US, when the sciences of face-to-face interaction first crystallized in the years after the second world war, many scholars came to imagine interaction as an intrinsically small-scale level of social reality that demanded fine-grained, microscopic methods, methods that often required mechanical recording technologies. Interaction’s smallness acquired a new subversive politics in the late 60s and early 70s, especially as feminist and liberal anti-racist scholars of discourse envisioned “the interpersonal” as a micropolitical domain. They promised to pinpoint patriarchy and racism with the help of recording technologies and faithful transcripts of talk. But these new scholars of the small were quickly forced to explain how this micropolitics related to a politics elsewhere and how interaction itself related to a proverbial wider world. In this talk, I retrace the many troubles that have come from treating discursive interaction as small. I argue that while interaction has no intrinsic ontological scale, this legacy of scalar contestation continues to shape what we think interaction is and what studying it can–and cannot–deliver.

         

        Thursday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:“Binajau Tambacan”: A Morphological Analysis of the Sinama Variety in Barangay Tambacan of Iligan City
        Keven O. Opamin (Mindanao State University – Iligan Institute of Technology)
        2:00 PM:Images and Symbols of the Gypsies (Roma) in the Early USSR
        Elena Marushiakova (University of St Andrews)
        Veselin Popov (University of St Andrews)
        2:30 PM:“Everyday Internet” among Tibetans in Xining (Qinghai, Northwest China)
        Giulia Cabras (Czech Academy of Sciences, Oriental Institute)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Sociolinguistic Aspects of the Linguistic Visuals across the Ganges in Varanasi
        Anil Thakur (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Pursotam Kumar (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        2:00 PM:Sociopragmatics of Translating Tourism Texts: A Case of Spiritual Tourism in India
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (Banaras Hindu University), Varanasi, India)
        2:30 PM:Produsing Press Freedom: Investigating the Mediatization of an Issue About a Philippine Online News Site on Twitter and Facebook
        Brian D. Villaverde (Southern Luzon State University)

        General Papers: Linguistic Landscapes

        1:30 PM:A Relational Analysis of Place Names and Gentrification in Southwest China
        Michela Bonato (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice)
        2:00 PM:Te Hā O Te Tangata; A Discourse Analysis of Language and the Environment
        Hone Waengarangi Morris (Massey University)
        2:30 PM:Framing the Folk in Popular Folklore: Locating Folk Influences in Philippine Creature Urban Legends
        Joseph P. Casibual Jr. (Western Mindanao State University)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Am I Not a Postcolonial Subject?
        Haris C. Adhikari (Kathmandu University)
        2:00 PM:Symbolism in Malaysian Educational Anthropology: A Corpus-Driven Analysis
        Mazura Mastura Muhammad (Sultan Idris Education University)
        Wong Wei Lun* (Sultan Idris Education University)
        2:30 PM:Are Students Becoming Less Polite? Politeness Strategies, Sociological Variables, and Social Practices in Online Communication
        Lorena Taglucop (University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        1:30 PM:Soft Masculinity Symbols in Local Skincare Brand’s Advertising
        Agustinus Rusdianto Berto (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        Oliver* (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        2:00 PM:The Symbology of Plants in Traditional Healing Techniques in Timor-Leste and its Desacralization on Social Media
        Afonso de Almeida (National University Timor Lorosa)
        Karin N.R. Indart (National University Timor Lorosa)
        2:30 PM:Between the East and West: Development of Traditional Eastern and Modern Western Symbols in Korean Pop Music
        Michal Schwarz (Masaryk University)

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:Motivation of Malaysian Undergraduate Japanese Language Learners
        Rokiah Paee (Universiti Malaysia Sarawak)
        Roswati Abdul Rashid (Universiti Malaysia Terengganu)
        2:00 PM:Code Choice in Online Media: The Case of Malaysia Muda (Young) Leaders
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Zuraidar Badaruddin* (Universiti Teknologi MARA)
        2:30 APM:Palawan’s Prime Tourist Destinations’ Tourism Landscapes and Discourse
        Janet B. Oab (Palawan State University)

        Colloquium Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Discussing Linguistic Cultural Anthropology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)

        Closing Ceremony

        5:00 PM – 6:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Talk on the success of the Conference
        Explanation of publishing
        Thank you and prospectus for SOAS GLOCAL CALA Conference 2023
        Questions and Answers
        Good bye and closing

        Wednesday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:The Seasonal Calendar of the Bateq Indigenous in West Malaysia
        Roshidah Hassan (Universiti Malaya)
        Siti Zaidah Zainuddin* (Universiti Malaya)
        2:00 PM:Contestation of English and Arabic in the Building of Pesantren Culture in Indonesia
        Salimah Salimah (Universitas Airlangga)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Linguistic landscape of the Varanasi city: An initial sketch
        Anil Thakur (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Sanjukta Ghosh (IIT (BHU), Varanasi)
        2:00 PM:East Asians Accepted: The Sociolinguistic Evolution of Language Affecting How East Asian People Perceive Themselves and are Perceived by Others
        Benjamin Duke (University College London, United Kingdom)
        2:30 PM:Review on Learning Disability Interventions for Aphasia in Malaysia
        Celine Deanna Chan Wei Ling Chan (UCSI University)
        Saeid Motevalli (UCSI University)

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Language Evolution: An NCT And Conlang Framework
        Menon Swathi Sivakumar (NIT Trichy)
        Vinod Balakrishnan (NIT Trichy)
        2:00 PM:The Socialization of Local Identity to Global Context: Translingual and Transcultural Phenomena among TikTok Users
        Layli Hamida (Unviersitas Airlangga)
        2:30 PM:Çilapulapu as First Filipino Hero: Symbolic Transformation from Colonial History to Post-Colonial Commemoration During the COVID-19 Pandemic
        Christina Alexandra Guzman Morales (University of Asia and the Pacific)

        General Papers: Discourse Analysis

        1:30 PM:Nonstandard English Spelling On Social Media As An Index For Malaysian Identity
        Nur Amirah Zakaria (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        2:00 PM:Discussing Critical Linguistic Anthropology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        2:30 PM:The Symbol of the Ghosts and Devil Characters in the Fairy Tales and its Influence on Modern Vietnamese Social
        Nguyen Thi Dung (University of Labor and Social Affairs Vietnam)

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Anthropological Aspects of Content and Language Integrated Learning and its Current Worldwide State
        Victoria Kytina (University of Kuala Lumpur)
        2:00 PM:Naming Methods of Roads, Streets and Alleys from Chinese to English in the Cultural City of Changsha, China
        Zhou Yin (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        Wong Ling Yann (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        2:30 PM:Environmental Corporate Social Responsibility of Manufacturing Industries Along Iligan Bay: A Discourse Analysis
        Venus R. Parmisana (Mindanao State University-Iligan Institute of Technology)

        General Papers: Text, Context, Entextualization

        1:30 PM:Epistemics of Discourse Marker Nah in Food Reviews in Colloquial Indonesian
        Rika Mutiara (Esa Unggul University)
        2:00 PM:Exploring Compound Word Processing by Chinese-as-a-Second-Language Learners: The Role of Morphological Awareness, Semantic Transparency, and Context
        Chun-yin Doris Chen (National Taiwan Normal University)

        General Papers: Language Socialization

        1:30 PM:The Hidden Language Socializations of for Marriage Immigrants in South Korean: Challenges and Changes
        Kamilla Pak (University of Suwon (Rep. of Korea))

        To be updated

        Thursday Parallel Sessions 1

        8:30 AM – 10:00 AM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language Ideologies

        8:30 AM:Conceptualizing the Language and Cultural Ideologies of the Kadazandusun in Borneo, Malaysia
        Trixie Tangit (Universiti Malaysia Sabah)
        9:00 AM:King of Talk, King of Listening: Backchannel Practices in ‘Tonight with Boy Abunda’
        Franz Erika Arcamo (Mindanao State University)
        9:30 AM:A New Entrepreneur is a Premature Baby: A Critical Metaphor Analysis of Malaysian Supply Bills
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)

        General Papers: Language, Gender, Sexuality

        8:30 AM:In the Gaze of Women: The Social Reproduction of Filipina Migrant Workers represented in Ten Local Mainstream Films in Recent Decades
        Elora S. Francisco (De La Salle University)
        Karlena Ameina B. Saturnino (De La Salle University)
        9:00 AM:Understand the Rape Culture Landscape in the Philippines through #HijaAko Revolution: A Multimodal Discourse Analysis
        Aileen Bautista (De La Salle University – Manila)

        General Papers: Language in Real and Virtual Spaces

        8:30 AM:Dalitisation of Cultural Behaviour: Representation of Dalithood as a Symbol within Educational Curricula and Media
        Sibansu Mukhopadhyay (Government of West Bengal)
        Titas Biswas (Jadavpur University)
        9:00 AM: Jimmy Liao and Affect: A Multimodal Study
        Xiaoyang Qi (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        Roslina Mamat (Universiti Putra Malaysia)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        8:30 AM:Chinese Numerical Proverbs using Semiotic Features to Describe Cultural Elements of Ancient Chinese Society
        He Zongjin (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        9:00 AM:Social Media Posts; Texts, and Images Iconization of Symbols
        Rimi Ghosh Dastidar (Assistant Professor, West Bengal Education Service)
        Shrestha Majumdar (Society for Natural Language and Technology Research, Kolkata)
        9:30 AM:Interlocution and Writing Stylistics in Shopping Malls in Japan
        Kida Tsuyoshi (Dokkyo University)

        General Papers: Symbolism

        8:30 AM:The Symbolism of Brinjal and Plot Number in Malaysian Tamil Folk Songs
        Kingston Pal Thamburaj (Sultan Idris education university, Malaysia)
        Logeswary Arumugum (Teacher)
        9:00 AM:Symbolic Representation of the Past and Present Local, National and Global Developments in the Linguistic Landscape of Goa
        Marta Dąbrowska (Institute of English Studies, Jagiellonian University, Cracow, Poland)
        9:30 AM:From Oppression to Modernity: Positive Innovations in the use of Western Symbols in South Korean Pop Music and Culture
        Michal Schwarz (Masaryk University, Faculty of Arts, Department of Vietnamese Studies)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        9:30 AM:The Ideologies of a New Javanese Language
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        9:00 AM:Symbols and Metaphors in the Marketing Communication of the Advertising Language
        Jyoti Kumari (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi)
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi)
        9:30 AM:Contrastive Analysis between the Yin-Yang Philosophical Concept in East Asia Cultural Sphere and Grammatical Gender in Romanic Languages
        Tak-sum Wong (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University)

        General Papers: Performance and Performativity

        8:30 AM:Expressive and Evaluative Aspects of Connotation in Hausa Court-Song: A Semantic Analysis
        Yusuf Nuhu Inuwa (Sule Lamido University, Kafin Hausa, Nigeria / Universiti Sains Malaysia)

        Keynote 2

        10:30 AM – 12:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Keynote 2: Professor. Michael Lempert

        Scale and the Linguistic Anthropology of Discursive Interaction

        Linguistic anthropologists like to stress how discursive interaction–social interaction mediated by language use–is embedded in its social, cultural, and historical context. In part this reflects anthropology’s long (if ambivalent) legacy of holism and its methodological commitment to ethnography. I argue here that this sensibility is also a response to old but stubborn debates about scale that continue to haunt the study of objects of knowledge such as “discourse,” “conversation,” and “interaction.” Focusing on interaction, I first illustrate linguistic anthropology’s integrative approach to interaction and note how it differs from adjacent traditions such as Conversation Analysis on matters of context and scale. I then turn back historically to ask how and why discursive interaction became scaled as small in the first place. In the US, when the sciences of face-to-face interaction first crystallized in the years after the second world war, many scholars came to imagine interaction as an intrinsically small-scale level of social reality that demanded fine-grained, microscopic methods, methods that often required mechanical recording technologies. Interaction’s smallness acquired a new subversive politics in the late 60s and early 70s, especially as feminist and liberal anti-racist scholars of discourse envisioned “the interpersonal” as a micropolitical domain. They promised to pinpoint patriarchy and racism with the help of recording technologies and faithful transcripts of talk. But these new scholars of the small were quickly forced to explain how this micropolitics related to a politics elsewhere and how interaction itself related to a proverbial wider world. In this talk, I retrace the many troubles that have come from treating discursive interaction as small. I argue that while interaction has no intrinsic ontological scale, this legacy of scalar contestation continues to shape what we think interaction is and what studying it can–and cannot–deliver.

         

        Thursday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:“Binajau Tambacan”: A Morphological Analysis of the Sinama Variety in Barangay Tambacan of Iligan City
        Keven O. Opamin (Mindanao State University – Iligan Institute of Technology)
        2:00 PM:Images and Symbols of the Gypsies (Roma) in the Early USSR
        Elena Marushiakova (University of St Andrews)
        Veselin Popov (University of St Andrews)
        2:30 PM:“Everyday Internet” among Tibetans in Xining (Qinghai, Northwest China)
        Giulia Cabras (Czech Academy of Sciences, Oriental Institute)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Sociolinguistic Aspects of the Linguistic Visuals across the Ganges in Varanasi
        Anil Thakur (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Pursotam Kumar (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        2:00 PM:Sociopragmatics of Translating Tourism Texts: A Case of Spiritual Tourism in India
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (Banaras Hindu University), Varanasi, India)
        2:30 PM:Produsing Press Freedom: Investigating the Mediatization of an Issue About a Philippine Online News Site on Twitter and Facebook
        Brian D. Villaverde (Southern Luzon State University)

        General Papers: Linguistic Landscapes

        1:30 PM:A Relational Analysis of Place Names and Gentrification in Southwest China
        Michela Bonato (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice)
        2:00 PM:Te Hā O Te Tangata; A Discourse Analysis of Language and the Environment
        Hone Waengarangi Morris (Massey University)
        2:30 PM:Framing the Folk in Popular Folklore: Locating Folk Influences in Philippine Creature Urban Legends
        Joseph P. Casibual Jr. (Western Mindanao State University)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Am I Not a Postcolonial Subject?
        Haris C. Adhikari (Kathmandu University)
        2:00 PM:Symbolism in Malaysian Educational Anthropology: A Corpus-Driven Analysis
        Mazura Mastura Muhammad (Sultan Idris Education University)
        Wong Wei Lun* (Sultan Idris Education University)
        2:30 PM:Are Students Becoming Less Polite? Politeness Strategies, Sociological Variables, and Social Practices in Online Communication
        Lorena Taglucop (University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        1:30 PM:Soft Masculinity Symbols in Local Skincare Brand’s Advertising
        Agustinus Rusdianto Berto (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        Oliver* (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        2:00 PM:The Symbology of Plants in Traditional Healing Techniques in Timor-Leste and its Desacralization on Social Media
        Afonso de Almeida (National University Timor Lorosa)
        Karin N.R. Indart (National University Timor Lorosa)
        2:30 PM:Between the East and West: Development of Traditional Eastern and Modern Western Symbols in Korean Pop Music
        Michal Schwarz (Masaryk University)

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:Motivation of Malaysian Undergraduate Japanese Language Learners
        Rokiah Paee (Universiti Malaysia Sarawak)
        Roswati Abdul Rashid (Universiti Malaysia Terengganu)
        2:00 PM:Code Choice in Online Media: The Case of Malaysia Muda (Young) Leaders
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Zuraidar Badaruddin* (Universiti Teknologi MARA)
        2:30 APM:Palawan’s Prime Tourist Destinations’ Tourism Landscapes and Discourse
        Janet B. Oab (Palawan State University)

        Colloquium Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Discussing Linguistic Cultural Anthropology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)

        Closing Ceremony

        5:00 PM – 6:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Talk on the success of the Conference
        Explanation of publishing
        Thank you and prospectus for SOAS GLOCAL CALA Conference 2023
        Questions and Answers
        Good bye and closing

        10:30 AM – 12:00 PM, Thursday, November 3, 2022

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7
        • Rm 8
        • Rm 9

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:Language is Culture on Intercultural Communication
        Fatiha Guessabi (University of Bechar-Algeria)
        2:00 PM:The Role of Fingerspelling in Saudi Arabian Deaf Education
        Ahmed Alzahrani (Majmaah University, Saudi Arabia)

        General Papers: Language Ideologies

        1:30 PM:Racing Dominicans in Spain: The Construction of Language and Race among Dominican Immigrants and Spaniards in Public Discourse
        Juan R. Valdez (Independent Scholar)
        2:00 PM:Puro, Jondo and Por Derecho: Shifting Linguistic Practices of Flamenco Communities in Spain
        Marta Wieczorek (Zayed University, Dubai, United Arab Emirates)
        2:30 PM:“Poder utilizar la lengua propia es un derecho fundamental”: Language Ideologies in El Procés Trial, in Catalonia and in Spain
        Marina Carcamo Garcia (University of Arizona, U.S.)

        General Papers: Ethnographical Language Work

        1:30 PM:He Taiao He Tinana – E Rua e Rua: The Environment and the Body – One and the Same
        Hone Morris (Massey University, New Zealand)
        2:00 PM:A Linguistic Ethnographic Approach To Everyday Interactions Between The Local and Refugee Women In A Turkish Town
        Hasret Saygi (Maltepe University, Turkey)

         

        General Papers: Language and Spatiotemporal Frames

        1:30 PM:Liminality, Metaphor and Place in the Farming Landscape of Tinos: The Village of Kampos
        Maria Vidali (College Year Athens)
        2:00 PM:Contested Boundaries and Language Variants in a Balkan Capital City
        Grace E. Fielder (University of Arizona, U.S.)
        2:30 PM:Cross-Linguistic Influence in the Acquisition of Spatial Prepositions by The Albanian Learners of English As FL
        Daniela-Carmen Stoica (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)
        Anyla Saraçi (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)

        General Papers: Narrative and Metanarrative

        1:30 PM:The emergence of the post-narrativity in the era of artificial intelligence: A non-anthropocentric cybersemiotics of literary machines
        Sung-Do Kim (Korea University, South Korea)
        Jin-Young Lee (Korea University, South Korea)
        2:00 PM:Memory shaping in migration age: Amal’s walking
        Vildan Mahmutoglu (Galatasaray University, Turkey)
        2:30 PM:Recalibrating Narratives of the Jewish Holocaust
        Nicole Scott (SAOS GLOCAL)

        General Papers: Language Documentation

        1:30 PM:Linguistic Landscape as a source for minority language studies. Case of Greko
        Karolina Gortych-Michalak (Adami Mickiewicz University, Poland)
        2:00 PM:Iliad’s Achilles: A Libyco-Berber Patronymic?
        Valeria Argiolas (INALCO University, France)

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Endangered Languages: Modern Mansi Research
        Natalia Koshelyuk (National Research Tomsk State University, Russia)
        2:00 PM:Conceptual Personification of Abstract Notions in the English-Language News Discourse
        Marina Sazonova (Moscow State Linguistic University, Russia)

        Colloquium:Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 AM:Reflections of Christianity in Popular Names of Plants in Albanian and Romanian Languages
        Anyla Saraçi (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)
        Daniela-Carmen Stoica (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)
        Robert Damo (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)

        Colloquium: Oral heritage

        1:30 AM:Language, identity and militantism in contemporary Corsica. An investigation from a tradition of improvised singing called “chjam’è rispondi”.
        Giovanni Ragni| (Università di Corsica Pasquale Paoli|, France)

        Wednesday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:The Seasonal Calendar of the Bateq Indigenous in West Malaysia
        Roshidah Hassan (Universiti Malaya)
        Siti Zaidah Zainuddin* (Universiti Malaya)
        2:00 PM:Contestation of English and Arabic in the Building of Pesantren Culture in Indonesia
        Salimah Salimah (Universitas Airlangga)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Linguistic landscape of the Varanasi city: An initial sketch
        Anil Thakur (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Sanjukta Ghosh (IIT (BHU), Varanasi)
        2:00 PM:East Asians Accepted: The Sociolinguistic Evolution of Language Affecting How East Asian People Perceive Themselves and are Perceived by Others
        Benjamin Duke (University College London, United Kingdom)
        2:30 PM:Review on Learning Disability Interventions for Aphasia in Malaysia
        Celine Deanna Chan Wei Ling Chan (UCSI University)
        Saeid Motevalli (UCSI University)

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Language Evolution: An NCT And Conlang Framework
        Menon Swathi Sivakumar (NIT Trichy)
        Vinod Balakrishnan (NIT Trichy)
        2:00 PM:The Socialization of Local Identity to Global Context: Translingual and Transcultural Phenomena among TikTok Users
        Layli Hamida (Unviersitas Airlangga)
        2:30 PM:Çilapulapu as First Filipino Hero: Symbolic Transformation from Colonial History to Post-Colonial Commemoration During the COVID-19 Pandemic
        Christina Alexandra Guzman Morales (University of Asia and the Pacific)

        General Papers: Discourse Analysis

        1:30 PM:Nonstandard English Spelling On Social Media As An Index For Malaysian Identity
        Nur Amirah Zakaria (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        2:00 PM:Discussing Critical Linguistic Anthropology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        2:30 PM:The Symbol of the Ghosts and Devil Characters in the Fairy Tales and its Influence on Modern Vietnamese Social
        Nguyen Thi Dung (University of Labor and Social Affairs Vietnam)

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Anthropological Aspects of Content and Language Integrated Learning and its Current Worldwide State
        Victoria Kytina (University of Kuala Lumpur)
        2:00 PM:Naming Methods of Roads, Streets and Alleys from Chinese to English in the Cultural City of Changsha, China
        Zhou Yin (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        Wong Ling Yann (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        2:30 PM:Environmental Corporate Social Responsibility of Manufacturing Industries Along Iligan Bay: A Discourse Analysis
        Venus R. Parmisana (Mindanao State University-Iligan Institute of Technology)

        General Papers: Text, Context, Entextualization

        1:30 PM:Epistemics of Discourse Marker Nah in Food Reviews in Colloquial Indonesian
        Rika Mutiara (Esa Unggul University)
        2:00 PM:Exploring Compound Word Processing by Chinese-as-a-Second-Language Learners: The Role of Morphological Awareness, Semantic Transparency, and Context
        Chun-yin Doris Chen (National Taiwan Normal University)

        General Papers: Language Socialization

        1:30 PM:The Hidden Language Socializations of for Marriage Immigrants in South Korean: Challenges and Changes
        Kamilla Pak (University of Suwon (Rep. of Korea))

        To be updated

        Thursday Parallel Sessions 1

        8:30 AM – 10:00 AM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language Ideologies

        8:30 AM:Conceptualizing the Language and Cultural Ideologies of the Kadazandusun in Borneo, Malaysia
        Trixie Tangit (Universiti Malaysia Sabah)
        9:00 AM:King of Talk, King of Listening: Backchannel Practices in ‘Tonight with Boy Abunda’
        Franz Erika Arcamo (Mindanao State University)
        9:30 AM:A New Entrepreneur is a Premature Baby: A Critical Metaphor Analysis of Malaysian Supply Bills
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)

        General Papers: Language, Gender, Sexuality

        8:30 AM:In the Gaze of Women: The Social Reproduction of Filipina Migrant Workers represented in Ten Local Mainstream Films in Recent Decades
        Elora S. Francisco (De La Salle University)
        Karlena Ameina B. Saturnino (De La Salle University)
        9:00 AM:Understand the Rape Culture Landscape in the Philippines through #HijaAko Revolution: A Multimodal Discourse Analysis
        Aileen Bautista (De La Salle University – Manila)

        General Papers: Language in Real and Virtual Spaces

        8:30 AM:Dalitisation of Cultural Behaviour: Representation of Dalithood as a Symbol within Educational Curricula and Media
        Sibansu Mukhopadhyay (Government of West Bengal)
        Titas Biswas (Jadavpur University)
        9:00 AM: Jimmy Liao and Affect: A Multimodal Study
        Xiaoyang Qi (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        Roslina Mamat (Universiti Putra Malaysia)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        8:30 AM:Chinese Numerical Proverbs using Semiotic Features to Describe Cultural Elements of Ancient Chinese Society
        He Zongjin (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        9:00 AM:Social Media Posts; Texts, and Images Iconization of Symbols
        Rimi Ghosh Dastidar (Assistant Professor, West Bengal Education Service)
        Shrestha Majumdar (Society for Natural Language and Technology Research, Kolkata)
        9:30 AM:Interlocution and Writing Stylistics in Shopping Malls in Japan
        Kida Tsuyoshi (Dokkyo University)

        General Papers: Symbolism

        8:30 AM:The Symbolism of Brinjal and Plot Number in Malaysian Tamil Folk Songs
        Kingston Pal Thamburaj (Sultan Idris education university, Malaysia)
        Logeswary Arumugum (Teacher)
        9:00 AM:Symbolic Representation of the Past and Present Local, National and Global Developments in the Linguistic Landscape of Goa
        Marta Dąbrowska (Institute of English Studies, Jagiellonian University, Cracow, Poland)
        9:30 AM:From Oppression to Modernity: Positive Innovations in the use of Western Symbols in South Korean Pop Music and Culture
        Michal Schwarz (Masaryk University, Faculty of Arts, Department of Vietnamese Studies)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        9:30 AM:The Ideologies of a New Javanese Language
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        9:00 AM:Symbols and Metaphors in the Marketing Communication of the Advertising Language
        Jyoti Kumari (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi)
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi)
        9:30 AM:Contrastive Analysis between the Yin-Yang Philosophical Concept in East Asia Cultural Sphere and Grammatical Gender in Romanic Languages
        Tak-sum Wong (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University)

        General Papers: Performance and Performativity

        8:30 AM:Expressive and Evaluative Aspects of Connotation in Hausa Court-Song: A Semantic Analysis
        Yusuf Nuhu Inuwa (Sule Lamido University, Kafin Hausa, Nigeria / Universiti Sains Malaysia)

        Keynote 2

        10:30 AM – 12:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Keynote 2: Professor. Michael Lempert

        Scale and the Linguistic Anthropology of Discursive Interaction

        Linguistic anthropologists like to stress how discursive interaction–social interaction mediated by language use–is embedded in its social, cultural, and historical context. In part this reflects anthropology’s long (if ambivalent) legacy of holism and its methodological commitment to ethnography. I argue here that this sensibility is also a response to old but stubborn debates about scale that continue to haunt the study of objects of knowledge such as “discourse,” “conversation,” and “interaction.” Focusing on interaction, I first illustrate linguistic anthropology’s integrative approach to interaction and note how it differs from adjacent traditions such as Conversation Analysis on matters of context and scale. I then turn back historically to ask how and why discursive interaction became scaled as small in the first place. In the US, when the sciences of face-to-face interaction first crystallized in the years after the second world war, many scholars came to imagine interaction as an intrinsically small-scale level of social reality that demanded fine-grained, microscopic methods, methods that often required mechanical recording technologies. Interaction’s smallness acquired a new subversive politics in the late 60s and early 70s, especially as feminist and liberal anti-racist scholars of discourse envisioned “the interpersonal” as a micropolitical domain. They promised to pinpoint patriarchy and racism with the help of recording technologies and faithful transcripts of talk. But these new scholars of the small were quickly forced to explain how this micropolitics related to a politics elsewhere and how interaction itself related to a proverbial wider world. In this talk, I retrace the many troubles that have come from treating discursive interaction as small. I argue that while interaction has no intrinsic ontological scale, this legacy of scalar contestation continues to shape what we think interaction is and what studying it can–and cannot–deliver.

         

        Thursday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:“Binajau Tambacan”: A Morphological Analysis of the Sinama Variety in Barangay Tambacan of Iligan City
        Keven O. Opamin (Mindanao State University – Iligan Institute of Technology)
        2:00 PM:Images and Symbols of the Gypsies (Roma) in the Early USSR
        Elena Marushiakova (University of St Andrews)
        Veselin Popov (University of St Andrews)
        2:30 PM:“Everyday Internet” among Tibetans in Xining (Qinghai, Northwest China)
        Giulia Cabras (Czech Academy of Sciences, Oriental Institute)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Sociolinguistic Aspects of the Linguistic Visuals across the Ganges in Varanasi
        Anil Thakur (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Pursotam Kumar (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        2:00 PM:Sociopragmatics of Translating Tourism Texts: A Case of Spiritual Tourism in India
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (Banaras Hindu University), Varanasi, India)
        2:30 PM:Produsing Press Freedom: Investigating the Mediatization of an Issue About a Philippine Online News Site on Twitter and Facebook
        Brian D. Villaverde (Southern Luzon State University)

        General Papers: Linguistic Landscapes

        1:30 PM:A Relational Analysis of Place Names and Gentrification in Southwest China
        Michela Bonato (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice)
        2:00 PM:Te Hā O Te Tangata; A Discourse Analysis of Language and the Environment
        Hone Waengarangi Morris (Massey University)
        2:30 PM:Framing the Folk in Popular Folklore: Locating Folk Influences in Philippine Creature Urban Legends
        Joseph P. Casibual Jr. (Western Mindanao State University)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Am I Not a Postcolonial Subject?
        Haris C. Adhikari (Kathmandu University)
        2:00 PM:Symbolism in Malaysian Educational Anthropology: A Corpus-Driven Analysis
        Mazura Mastura Muhammad (Sultan Idris Education University)
        Wong Wei Lun* (Sultan Idris Education University)
        2:30 PM:Are Students Becoming Less Polite? Politeness Strategies, Sociological Variables, and Social Practices in Online Communication
        Lorena Taglucop (University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        1:30 PM:Soft Masculinity Symbols in Local Skincare Brand’s Advertising
        Agustinus Rusdianto Berto (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        Oliver* (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        2:00 PM:The Symbology of Plants in Traditional Healing Techniques in Timor-Leste and its Desacralization on Social Media
        Afonso de Almeida (National University Timor Lorosa)
        Karin N.R. Indart (National University Timor Lorosa)
        2:30 PM:Between the East and West: Development of Traditional Eastern and Modern Western Symbols in Korean Pop Music
        Michal Schwarz (Masaryk University)

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:Motivation of Malaysian Undergraduate Japanese Language Learners
        Rokiah Paee (Universiti Malaysia Sarawak)
        Roswati Abdul Rashid (Universiti Malaysia Terengganu)
        2:00 PM:Code Choice in Online Media: The Case of Malaysia Muda (Young) Leaders
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Zuraidar Badaruddin* (Universiti Teknologi MARA)
        2:30 APM:Palawan’s Prime Tourist Destinations’ Tourism Landscapes and Discourse
        Janet B. Oab (Palawan State University)

        Colloquium Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Discussing Linguistic Cultural Anthropology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)

        Closing Ceremony

        5:00 PM – 6:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Talk on the success of the Conference
        Explanation of publishing
        Thank you and prospectus for SOAS GLOCAL CALA Conference 2023
        Questions and Answers
        Good bye and closing

        Wednesday Parallel Sessions 1

        8:30 AM – 10:00 AM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Gender and Sexuality

        8:30 AM:Investigating Gender Bias through Gender Markings in College Students’ Essays
        Nuriza P. Jalani (Zamboanga State College of Marine Sciences and Technology)
        9:00 AM:Sexual Discourses on Female Bodies, Androcentric Biases, and Colonial Ideologies (Surveying Some Contemporary Vietnamese Prose After 1986)
        Le Quoc Hieu (Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences)
        9:30 AM:Dichotomizing Women’s Re/Presentation: Textual Inferences and Narratives
        Joseph P. Casibual Jr. (Western Mindanao State University)

        General Papers: Ethnographical Language Work

        8:30 AM:Apologies on store notices during the Covid-19 pandemic in Tokyo
        Yuko Kano (University of Tsukuba)
        9:00 AM:Communicating with Nature: Disaster Resilience Practices among the Talaandig of Talakag, Bukidnon
        Lorena Taglucop (University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines)
        9:30 AM:Exploring University of Antique’s Hashtag Culture on Facebook: The Ethnography of Communication in Virtual Space
        Edbert Jay M. Cabrillos (University of Antique, Philippines)

        General Papers: Text, Context, Entextualization

        8:30 AM:Laughter Onomatopoeia as Role Language: A Comparative Analysis of Japanese and Chinese Comics
        Yihui Xia (Guangzhou College of Technology and Business)
        9:00 AM:The Role of L2 and Cultural Awareness in Memory Recall: A Cross-Cultural Study
        Chun-yin Doris Chen (National Taiwan Normal University)
        9:30 AM:Small and Cute? Small and Bad?: Divergent Semantic Extension of Diminutive Expressions in Thai and Korean
        Kultida Khammee (University of Phayao)
        Seongha Rhee (Hankuk Univ. of Foreign Studies, Korea and Mahidol University, Thailand)

        General Papers: Language and Spatiotemporal Frames

        8:30 AM:Symbols of Spatial Representation across Languages: From English Phrasal Verbs to Hindi Complex Predicates
        Pursotam Kumar (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        9:00 AM:Chronotopic (Re) Configurations in Life Stories of Filipino Domestic Workers in Hong Kong
        Nicanor L. Guinto (Southern Luzon State University)
        9:30 AM:We are at the Center of the World : Conception of “Centrality” in Pre-Modern Geography
        Qing Wang (Beijing Normal University)

        General Papers: Language, Contact and Change

        8:30 AM:Structural Analysis of Persian-English Code-switching and Code-mixing: An Inquiry into Universal Linguistic Constraints
        Hamzeh Moradi (Nanfang College, Guangzhou)
        Liang Gao Beijing* (Information Science & Technology University)
        9:00 AM:Tragic Realities in the Narratives of Washi (Sendong) Survivors
        Merceditha C. Alicando (Iligan Institute of Technology, Mindanao State University)

        General Papers: Discourse Analysis

        8:30 AM:Wayang Symbolisms and Technology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        9:00 AM:Code-Switching and Code-Mixing in Malaysia State Election Campaign Tweets
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Nur Farah Suhada Mohamad* (International Islamic University Malaysia)

        General Session: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        8:30 AM:Lexical Meranaw Variation: A Unifying Link of the Culture’s Ideologies on Identity, Peace and Unity
        Sharifa Khalid Masorong (CSSH, Mindanao State University)
        9:00 AM:Affective Factors Socializing Malaysians into Japanese Cultural patterns
        Rokiah Paee (Universiti Malaysia Sarawak)
        Roslina Mamat (Universiti Putra Malaysia)

        10:30 AM – 12:00 PM, Thursday, November 3, 2022

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7
        • Rm 8
        • Rm 9

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:Language is Culture on Intercultural Communication
        Fatiha Guessabi (University of Bechar-Algeria)
        2:00 PM:The Role of Fingerspelling in Saudi Arabian Deaf Education
        Ahmed Alzahrani (Majmaah University, Saudi Arabia)

        General Papers: Language Ideologies

        1:30 PM:Racing Dominicans in Spain: The Construction of Language and Race among Dominican Immigrants and Spaniards in Public Discourse
        Juan R. Valdez (Independent Scholar)
        2:00 PM:Puro, Jondo and Por Derecho: Shifting Linguistic Practices of Flamenco Communities in Spain
        Marta Wieczorek (Zayed University, Dubai, United Arab Emirates)
        2:30 PM:“Poder utilizar la lengua propia es un derecho fundamental”: Language Ideologies in El Procés Trial, in Catalonia and in Spain
        Marina Carcamo Garcia (University of Arizona, U.S.)

        General Papers: Ethnographical Language Work

        1:30 PM:He Taiao He Tinana – E Rua e Rua: The Environment and the Body – One and the Same
        Hone Morris (Massey University, New Zealand)
        2:00 PM:A Linguistic Ethnographic Approach To Everyday Interactions Between The Local and Refugee Women In A Turkish Town
        Hasret Saygi (Maltepe University, Turkey)

         

        General Papers: Language and Spatiotemporal Frames

        1:30 PM:Liminality, Metaphor and Place in the Farming Landscape of Tinos: The Village of Kampos
        Maria Vidali (College Year Athens)
        2:00 PM:Contested Boundaries and Language Variants in a Balkan Capital City
        Grace E. Fielder (University of Arizona, U.S.)
        2:30 PM:Cross-Linguistic Influence in the Acquisition of Spatial Prepositions by The Albanian Learners of English As FL
        Daniela-Carmen Stoica (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)
        Anyla Saraçi (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)

        General Papers: Narrative and Metanarrative

        1:30 PM:The emergence of the post-narrativity in the era of artificial intelligence: A non-anthropocentric cybersemiotics of literary machines
        Sung-Do Kim (Korea University, South Korea)
        Jin-Young Lee (Korea University, South Korea)
        2:00 PM:Memory shaping in migration age: Amal’s walking
        Vildan Mahmutoglu (Galatasaray University, Turkey)
        2:30 PM:Recalibrating Narratives of the Jewish Holocaust
        Nicole Scott (SAOS GLOCAL)

        General Papers: Language Documentation

        1:30 PM:Linguistic Landscape as a source for minority language studies. Case of Greko
        Karolina Gortych-Michalak (Adami Mickiewicz University, Poland)
        2:00 PM:Iliad’s Achilles: A Libyco-Berber Patronymic?
        Valeria Argiolas (INALCO University, France)

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Endangered Languages: Modern Mansi Research
        Natalia Koshelyuk (National Research Tomsk State University, Russia)
        2:00 PM:Conceptual Personification of Abstract Notions in the English-Language News Discourse
        Marina Sazonova (Moscow State Linguistic University, Russia)

        Colloquium:Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 AM:Reflections of Christianity in Popular Names of Plants in Albanian and Romanian Languages
        Anyla Saraçi (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)
        Daniela-Carmen Stoica (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)
        Robert Damo (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)

        Colloquium: Oral heritage

        1:30 AM:Language, identity and militantism in contemporary Corsica. An investigation from a tradition of improvised singing called “chjam’è rispondi”.
        Giovanni Ragni| (Università di Corsica Pasquale Paoli|, France)

        Wednesday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:The Seasonal Calendar of the Bateq Indigenous in West Malaysia
        Roshidah Hassan (Universiti Malaya)
        Siti Zaidah Zainuddin* (Universiti Malaya)
        2:00 PM:Contestation of English and Arabic in the Building of Pesantren Culture in Indonesia
        Salimah Salimah (Universitas Airlangga)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Linguistic landscape of the Varanasi city: An initial sketch
        Anil Thakur (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Sanjukta Ghosh (IIT (BHU), Varanasi)
        2:00 PM:East Asians Accepted: The Sociolinguistic Evolution of Language Affecting How East Asian People Perceive Themselves and are Perceived by Others
        Benjamin Duke (University College London, United Kingdom)
        2:30 PM:Review on Learning Disability Interventions for Aphasia in Malaysia
        Celine Deanna Chan Wei Ling Chan (UCSI University)
        Saeid Motevalli (UCSI University)

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Language Evolution: An NCT And Conlang Framework
        Menon Swathi Sivakumar (NIT Trichy)
        Vinod Balakrishnan (NIT Trichy)
        2:00 PM:The Socialization of Local Identity to Global Context: Translingual and Transcultural Phenomena among TikTok Users
        Layli Hamida (Unviersitas Airlangga)
        2:30 PM:Çilapulapu as First Filipino Hero: Symbolic Transformation from Colonial History to Post-Colonial Commemoration During the COVID-19 Pandemic
        Christina Alexandra Guzman Morales (University of Asia and the Pacific)

        General Papers: Discourse Analysis

        1:30 PM:Nonstandard English Spelling On Social Media As An Index For Malaysian Identity
        Nur Amirah Zakaria (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        2:00 PM:Discussing Critical Linguistic Anthropology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        2:30 PM:The Symbol of the Ghosts and Devil Characters in the Fairy Tales and its Influence on Modern Vietnamese Social
        Nguyen Thi Dung (University of Labor and Social Affairs Vietnam)

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Anthropological Aspects of Content and Language Integrated Learning and its Current Worldwide State
        Victoria Kytina (University of Kuala Lumpur)
        2:00 PM:Naming Methods of Roads, Streets and Alleys from Chinese to English in the Cultural City of Changsha, China
        Zhou Yin (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        Wong Ling Yann (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        2:30 PM:Environmental Corporate Social Responsibility of Manufacturing Industries Along Iligan Bay: A Discourse Analysis
        Venus R. Parmisana (Mindanao State University-Iligan Institute of Technology)

        General Papers: Text, Context, Entextualization

        1:30 PM:Epistemics of Discourse Marker Nah in Food Reviews in Colloquial Indonesian
        Rika Mutiara (Esa Unggul University)
        2:00 PM:Exploring Compound Word Processing by Chinese-as-a-Second-Language Learners: The Role of Morphological Awareness, Semantic Transparency, and Context
        Chun-yin Doris Chen (National Taiwan Normal University)

        General Papers: Language Socialization

        1:30 PM:The Hidden Language Socializations of for Marriage Immigrants in South Korean: Challenges and Changes
        Kamilla Pak (University of Suwon (Rep. of Korea))

        To be updated

        Thursday Parallel Sessions 1

        8:30 AM – 10:00 AM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language Ideologies

        8:30 AM:Conceptualizing the Language and Cultural Ideologies of the Kadazandusun in Borneo, Malaysia
        Trixie Tangit (Universiti Malaysia Sabah)
        9:00 AM:King of Talk, King of Listening: Backchannel Practices in ‘Tonight with Boy Abunda’
        Franz Erika Arcamo (Mindanao State University)
        9:30 AM:A New Entrepreneur is a Premature Baby: A Critical Metaphor Analysis of Malaysian Supply Bills
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)

        General Papers: Language, Gender, Sexuality

        8:30 AM:In the Gaze of Women: The Social Reproduction of Filipina Migrant Workers represented in Ten Local Mainstream Films in Recent Decades
        Elora S. Francisco (De La Salle University)
        Karlena Ameina B. Saturnino (De La Salle University)
        9:00 AM:Understand the Rape Culture Landscape in the Philippines through #HijaAko Revolution: A Multimodal Discourse Analysis
        Aileen Bautista (De La Salle University – Manila)

        General Papers: Language in Real and Virtual Spaces

        8:30 AM:Dalitisation of Cultural Behaviour: Representation of Dalithood as a Symbol within Educational Curricula and Media
        Sibansu Mukhopadhyay (Government of West Bengal)
        Titas Biswas (Jadavpur University)
        9:00 AM: Jimmy Liao and Affect: A Multimodal Study
        Xiaoyang Qi (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        Roslina Mamat (Universiti Putra Malaysia)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        8:30 AM:Chinese Numerical Proverbs using Semiotic Features to Describe Cultural Elements of Ancient Chinese Society
        He Zongjin (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        9:00 AM:Social Media Posts; Texts, and Images Iconization of Symbols
        Rimi Ghosh Dastidar (Assistant Professor, West Bengal Education Service)
        Shrestha Majumdar (Society for Natural Language and Technology Research, Kolkata)
        9:30 AM:Interlocution and Writing Stylistics in Shopping Malls in Japan
        Kida Tsuyoshi (Dokkyo University)

        General Papers: Symbolism

        8:30 AM:The Symbolism of Brinjal and Plot Number in Malaysian Tamil Folk Songs
        Kingston Pal Thamburaj (Sultan Idris education university, Malaysia)
        Logeswary Arumugum (Teacher)
        9:00 AM:Symbolic Representation of the Past and Present Local, National and Global Developments in the Linguistic Landscape of Goa
        Marta Dąbrowska (Institute of English Studies, Jagiellonian University, Cracow, Poland)
        9:30 AM:From Oppression to Modernity: Positive Innovations in the use of Western Symbols in South Korean Pop Music and Culture
        Michal Schwarz (Masaryk University, Faculty of Arts, Department of Vietnamese Studies)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        9:30 AM:The Ideologies of a New Javanese Language
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        9:00 AM:Symbols and Metaphors in the Marketing Communication of the Advertising Language
        Jyoti Kumari (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi)
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi)
        9:30 AM:Contrastive Analysis between the Yin-Yang Philosophical Concept in East Asia Cultural Sphere and Grammatical Gender in Romanic Languages
        Tak-sum Wong (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University)

        General Papers: Performance and Performativity

        8:30 AM:Expressive and Evaluative Aspects of Connotation in Hausa Court-Song: A Semantic Analysis
        Yusuf Nuhu Inuwa (Sule Lamido University, Kafin Hausa, Nigeria / Universiti Sains Malaysia)

        Keynote 2

        10:30 AM – 12:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Keynote 2: Professor. Michael Lempert

        Scale and the Linguistic Anthropology of Discursive Interaction

        Linguistic anthropologists like to stress how discursive interaction–social interaction mediated by language use–is embedded in its social, cultural, and historical context. In part this reflects anthropology’s long (if ambivalent) legacy of holism and its methodological commitment to ethnography. I argue here that this sensibility is also a response to old but stubborn debates about scale that continue to haunt the study of objects of knowledge such as “discourse,” “conversation,” and “interaction.” Focusing on interaction, I first illustrate linguistic anthropology’s integrative approach to interaction and note how it differs from adjacent traditions such as Conversation Analysis on matters of context and scale. I then turn back historically to ask how and why discursive interaction became scaled as small in the first place. In the US, when the sciences of face-to-face interaction first crystallized in the years after the second world war, many scholars came to imagine interaction as an intrinsically small-scale level of social reality that demanded fine-grained, microscopic methods, methods that often required mechanical recording technologies. Interaction’s smallness acquired a new subversive politics in the late 60s and early 70s, especially as feminist and liberal anti-racist scholars of discourse envisioned “the interpersonal” as a micropolitical domain. They promised to pinpoint patriarchy and racism with the help of recording technologies and faithful transcripts of talk. But these new scholars of the small were quickly forced to explain how this micropolitics related to a politics elsewhere and how interaction itself related to a proverbial wider world. In this talk, I retrace the many troubles that have come from treating discursive interaction as small. I argue that while interaction has no intrinsic ontological scale, this legacy of scalar contestation continues to shape what we think interaction is and what studying it can–and cannot–deliver.

         

        Thursday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:“Binajau Tambacan”: A Morphological Analysis of the Sinama Variety in Barangay Tambacan of Iligan City
        Keven O. Opamin (Mindanao State University – Iligan Institute of Technology)
        2:00 PM:Images and Symbols of the Gypsies (Roma) in the Early USSR
        Elena Marushiakova (University of St Andrews)
        Veselin Popov (University of St Andrews)
        2:30 PM:“Everyday Internet” among Tibetans in Xining (Qinghai, Northwest China)
        Giulia Cabras (Czech Academy of Sciences, Oriental Institute)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Sociolinguistic Aspects of the Linguistic Visuals across the Ganges in Varanasi
        Anil Thakur (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Pursotam Kumar (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        2:00 PM:Sociopragmatics of Translating Tourism Texts: A Case of Spiritual Tourism in India
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (Banaras Hindu University), Varanasi, India)
        2:30 PM:Produsing Press Freedom: Investigating the Mediatization of an Issue About a Philippine Online News Site on Twitter and Facebook
        Brian D. Villaverde (Southern Luzon State University)

        General Papers: Linguistic Landscapes

        1:30 PM:A Relational Analysis of Place Names and Gentrification in Southwest China
        Michela Bonato (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice)
        2:00 PM:Te Hā O Te Tangata; A Discourse Analysis of Language and the Environment
        Hone Waengarangi Morris (Massey University)
        2:30 PM:Framing the Folk in Popular Folklore: Locating Folk Influences in Philippine Creature Urban Legends
        Joseph P. Casibual Jr. (Western Mindanao State University)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Am I Not a Postcolonial Subject?
        Haris C. Adhikari (Kathmandu University)
        2:00 PM:Symbolism in Malaysian Educational Anthropology: A Corpus-Driven Analysis
        Mazura Mastura Muhammad (Sultan Idris Education University)
        Wong Wei Lun* (Sultan Idris Education University)
        2:30 PM:Are Students Becoming Less Polite? Politeness Strategies, Sociological Variables, and Social Practices in Online Communication
        Lorena Taglucop (University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        1:30 PM:Soft Masculinity Symbols in Local Skincare Brand’s Advertising
        Agustinus Rusdianto Berto (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        Oliver* (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        2:00 PM:The Symbology of Plants in Traditional Healing Techniques in Timor-Leste and its Desacralization on Social Media
        Afonso de Almeida (National University Timor Lorosa)
        Karin N.R. Indart (National University Timor Lorosa)
        2:30 PM:Between the East and West: Development of Traditional Eastern and Modern Western Symbols in Korean Pop Music
        Michal Schwarz (Masaryk University)

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:Motivation of Malaysian Undergraduate Japanese Language Learners
        Rokiah Paee (Universiti Malaysia Sarawak)
        Roswati Abdul Rashid (Universiti Malaysia Terengganu)
        2:00 PM:Code Choice in Online Media: The Case of Malaysia Muda (Young) Leaders
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Zuraidar Badaruddin* (Universiti Teknologi MARA)
        2:30 APM:Palawan’s Prime Tourist Destinations’ Tourism Landscapes and Discourse
        Janet B. Oab (Palawan State University)

        Colloquium Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Discussing Linguistic Cultural Anthropology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)

        Closing Ceremony

        5:00 PM – 6:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Talk on the success of the Conference
        Explanation of publishing
        Thank you and prospectus for SOAS GLOCAL CALA Conference 2023
        Questions and Answers
        Good bye and closing

        Tuesday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Tuesday, May 16, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language Ideologies

        1:30 PM:Layers of Inequality in Academic Writing Assessment
        Grace M. Saqueton (University of the Philippines Diliman)
        2:00 PM:Malaysian Female Riders: Through the Lens of Online Publications and Magazines
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Nur Amirah Zakaria (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        2:30 PM:Re-presenting Reform: Decolonial Globalization and Language Policy in India
        Bageshree Trivedi (The Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda, Vadodara, Gujarat, India)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Agency and Minority groups: A Linguistic Anthropology of Tribal Communities
        Debasis Patnaik (BITS Pilani K K Birla Goa Campus)
        2:00 PM:Extending on Work on Noh, Zen, and Now: Buddhism and Language
        Kim Rockell (Komazawa University)
        2:30 PM:Revisiting the History of the Creation of Bangla in the Framework of Language Contact
        Razaul Karim Faquire (University of Dhaka)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        1:30 PM:Small’ in Culture: The Cases of Thai and Korean
        Kultida Khammee (University of Phayao)
        Seongha Rhee (Hankuk Univ. of Foreign Studies, Korea and Mahidol University, Thailand)
        2:00 PM:Symbols of Emotional Metaphors in the Language of Food and Beverage Advertisements in India
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi)
        Jyoti Kumari (Indian Institute of Technology, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi)

        General Papers: Cognitive Anthropology and Language

        1:30 PM:Future Tense Usages in Trans-New Guinea Languages: A Functional-Cognitive Study
        Masahiko Nose (Shiga University)
        2:00 PM:The Poetics of Javanese Mantras: The Case of Simultaneous Signification
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        2:30 PM:Conlangs to Natlangs: Closing the Gap through Digital (Re)construction
        Menon Swathi Sivakumar (NIT Trichy)
        Dr. Vinod Balakrishnan (NIT Trichy)

        General Papers: Ethnographical Language Work

        1:30 PM:Am I My Brother’s Keeper? What the Batak Pragmatics of Favor-Asking, Apology-Making and Reciprocate Strategies Can Teach the World
        Teresita D Tajolosa (Palawan State University)
        2:00 PM:Malaysian Undergraduate Japanese Language Learners’ Learning Orientation (Qinghai, Northwest China)
        Rokiah Paee (Universiti Malaysia Sarawak)
        Hairul Nizam Ismail* (Universiti Sains Malaysia)
        2:30 PM:Review on Learning Disability – Aphasia Assessment in Malaysia
        Saeid Motevalli (UCSI University, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia)
        Celine Deanna Wei Ling Chan (UCSI University, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia)

        General Papers: Discourse Analysis

        1:30 PM:Animism in Lord Shiva Songs in Kandhapurana’s Ksdavul Vaaltthu and in his Presence Worship
        Dhilip Kumar Agilan (Independent Scholar)
        Kingston Pal Thamburaj (Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris (UPSI))
        2:00 PM:An Analysis on the Forms and Functions of Code-Switching and Code-Mixing as Communication Strategies Used by Malaysian Japanese-Language Tour Guides
        Roswati Abdul Rashid (University of Terengganu Malaysia)
        Roslina Mamat (University of Putra Malaysia)

        General Papers: Language, Contact and Change

        1:30 PM:Indigenous Language, Migration, and Sedentism of the Migrant Mamanwa in Southern Leyte, Philippines
        Angelie Genotiva (Visayas State University)
        Bethlehem A. Ponce* (Visayas State University)
        2:00 PM:Political Discourse Contiguous with Malaysia’s National Culture Policy
        Mansoureh Ebrahimi (Universiti Teknologi Malaysia)
        Siti Fatihah Selamat* (Universiti Teknologi Malaysia)

        Wednesday Parallel Sessions 1

        8:30 AM – 10:00 AM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Gender and Sexuality

        8:30 AM:Investigating Gender Bias through Gender Markings in College Students’ Essays
        Nuriza P. Jalani (Zamboanga State College of Marine Sciences and Technology)
        9:00 AM:Sexual Discourses on Female Bodies, Androcentric Biases, and Colonial Ideologies (Surveying Some Contemporary Vietnamese Prose After 1986)
        Le Quoc Hieu (Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences)
        9:30 AM:Dichotomizing Women’s Re/Presentation: Textual Inferences and Narratives
        Joseph P. Casibual Jr. (Western Mindanao State University)

        General Papers: Ethnographical Language Work

        8:30 AM:Apologies on store notices during the Covid-19 pandemic in Tokyo
        Yuko Kano (University of Tsukuba)
        9:00 AM:Communicating with Nature: Disaster Resilience Practices among the Talaandig of Talakag, Bukidnon
        Lorena Taglucop (University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines)
        9:30 AM:Exploring University of Antique’s Hashtag Culture on Facebook: The Ethnography of Communication in Virtual Space
        Edbert Jay M. Cabrillos (University of Antique, Philippines)

        General Papers: Text, Context, Entextualization

        8:30 AM:Laughter Onomatopoeia as Role Language: A Comparative Analysis of Japanese and Chinese Comics
        Yihui Xia (Guangzhou College of Technology and Business)
        9:00 AM:The Role of L2 and Cultural Awareness in Memory Recall: A Cross-Cultural Study
        Chun-yin Doris Chen (National Taiwan Normal University)
        9:30 AM:Small and Cute? Small and Bad?: Divergent Semantic Extension of Diminutive Expressions in Thai and Korean
        Kultida Khammee (University of Phayao)
        Seongha Rhee (Hankuk Univ. of Foreign Studies, Korea and Mahidol University, Thailand)

        General Papers: Language and Spatiotemporal Frames

        8:30 AM:Symbols of Spatial Representation across Languages: From English Phrasal Verbs to Hindi Complex Predicates
        Pursotam Kumar (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        9:00 AM:Chronotopic (Re) Configurations in Life Stories of Filipino Domestic Workers in Hong Kong
        Nicanor L. Guinto (Southern Luzon State University)
        9:30 AM:We are at the Center of the World : Conception of “Centrality” in Pre-Modern Geography
        Qing Wang (Beijing Normal University)

        General Papers: Language, Contact and Change

        8:30 AM:Structural Analysis of Persian-English Code-switching and Code-mixing: An Inquiry into Universal Linguistic Constraints
        Hamzeh Moradi (Nanfang College, Guangzhou)
        Liang Gao Beijing* (Information Science & Technology University)
        9:00 AM:Tragic Realities in the Narratives of Washi (Sendong) Survivors
        Merceditha C. Alicando (Iligan Institute of Technology, Mindanao State University)

        General Papers: Discourse Analysis

        8:30 AM:Wayang Symbolisms and Technology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        9:00 AM:Code-Switching and Code-Mixing in Malaysia State Election Campaign Tweets
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Nur Farah Suhada Mohamad* (International Islamic University Malaysia)

        General Session: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        8:30 AM:Lexical Meranaw Variation: A Unifying Link of the Culture’s Ideologies on Identity, Peace and Unity
        Sharifa Khalid Masorong (CSSH, Mindanao State University)
        9:00 AM:Affective Factors Socializing Malaysians into Japanese Cultural patterns
        Rokiah Paee (Universiti Malaysia Sarawak)
        Roslina Mamat (Universiti Putra Malaysia)

        10:30 AM – 12:00 PM, Thursday, November 3, 2022

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7
        • Rm 8
        • Rm 9

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:Language is Culture on Intercultural Communication
        Fatiha Guessabi (University of Bechar-Algeria)
        2:00 PM:The Role of Fingerspelling in Saudi Arabian Deaf Education
        Ahmed Alzahrani (Majmaah University, Saudi Arabia)

        General Papers: Language Ideologies

        1:30 PM:Racing Dominicans in Spain: The Construction of Language and Race among Dominican Immigrants and Spaniards in Public Discourse
        Juan R. Valdez (Independent Scholar)
        2:00 PM:Puro, Jondo and Por Derecho: Shifting Linguistic Practices of Flamenco Communities in Spain
        Marta Wieczorek (Zayed University, Dubai, United Arab Emirates)
        2:30 PM:“Poder utilizar la lengua propia es un derecho fundamental”: Language Ideologies in El Procés Trial, in Catalonia and in Spain
        Marina Carcamo Garcia (University of Arizona, U.S.)

        General Papers: Ethnographical Language Work

        1:30 PM:He Taiao He Tinana – E Rua e Rua: The Environment and the Body – One and the Same
        Hone Morris (Massey University, New Zealand)
        2:00 PM:A Linguistic Ethnographic Approach To Everyday Interactions Between The Local and Refugee Women In A Turkish Town
        Hasret Saygi (Maltepe University, Turkey)

         

        General Papers: Language and Spatiotemporal Frames

        1:30 PM:Liminality, Metaphor and Place in the Farming Landscape of Tinos: The Village of Kampos
        Maria Vidali (College Year Athens)
        2:00 PM:Contested Boundaries and Language Variants in a Balkan Capital City
        Grace E. Fielder (University of Arizona, U.S.)
        2:30 PM:Cross-Linguistic Influence in the Acquisition of Spatial Prepositions by The Albanian Learners of English As FL
        Daniela-Carmen Stoica (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)
        Anyla Saraçi (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)

        General Papers: Narrative and Metanarrative

        1:30 PM:The emergence of the post-narrativity in the era of artificial intelligence: A non-anthropocentric cybersemiotics of literary machines
        Sung-Do Kim (Korea University, South Korea)
        Jin-Young Lee (Korea University, South Korea)
        2:00 PM:Memory shaping in migration age: Amal’s walking
        Vildan Mahmutoglu (Galatasaray University, Turkey)
        2:30 PM:Recalibrating Narratives of the Jewish Holocaust
        Nicole Scott (SAOS GLOCAL)

        General Papers: Language Documentation

        1:30 PM:Linguistic Landscape as a source for minority language studies. Case of Greko
        Karolina Gortych-Michalak (Adami Mickiewicz University, Poland)
        2:00 PM:Iliad’s Achilles: A Libyco-Berber Patronymic?
        Valeria Argiolas (INALCO University, France)

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Endangered Languages: Modern Mansi Research
        Natalia Koshelyuk (National Research Tomsk State University, Russia)
        2:00 PM:Conceptual Personification of Abstract Notions in the English-Language News Discourse
        Marina Sazonova (Moscow State Linguistic University, Russia)

        Colloquium:Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 AM:Reflections of Christianity in Popular Names of Plants in Albanian and Romanian Languages
        Anyla Saraçi (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)
        Daniela-Carmen Stoica (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)
        Robert Damo (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)

        Colloquium: Oral heritage

        1:30 AM:Language, identity and militantism in contemporary Corsica. An investigation from a tradition of improvised singing called “chjam’è rispondi”.
        Giovanni Ragni| (Università di Corsica Pasquale Paoli|, France)

        Wednesday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:The Seasonal Calendar of the Bateq Indigenous in West Malaysia
        Roshidah Hassan (Universiti Malaya)
        Siti Zaidah Zainuddin* (Universiti Malaya)
        2:00 PM:Contestation of English and Arabic in the Building of Pesantren Culture in Indonesia
        Salimah Salimah (Universitas Airlangga)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Linguistic landscape of the Varanasi city: An initial sketch
        Anil Thakur (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Sanjukta Ghosh (IIT (BHU), Varanasi)
        2:00 PM:East Asians Accepted: The Sociolinguistic Evolution of Language Affecting How East Asian People Perceive Themselves and are Perceived by Others
        Benjamin Duke (University College London, United Kingdom)
        2:30 PM:Review on Learning Disability Interventions for Aphasia in Malaysia
        Celine Deanna Chan Wei Ling Chan (UCSI University)
        Saeid Motevalli (UCSI University)

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Language Evolution: An NCT And Conlang Framework
        Menon Swathi Sivakumar (NIT Trichy)
        Vinod Balakrishnan (NIT Trichy)
        2:00 PM:The Socialization of Local Identity to Global Context: Translingual and Transcultural Phenomena among TikTok Users
        Layli Hamida (Unviersitas Airlangga)
        2:30 PM:Çilapulapu as First Filipino Hero: Symbolic Transformation from Colonial History to Post-Colonial Commemoration During the COVID-19 Pandemic
        Christina Alexandra Guzman Morales (University of Asia and the Pacific)

        General Papers: Discourse Analysis

        1:30 PM:Nonstandard English Spelling On Social Media As An Index For Malaysian Identity
        Nur Amirah Zakaria (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        2:00 PM:Discussing Critical Linguistic Anthropology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        2:30 PM:The Symbol of the Ghosts and Devil Characters in the Fairy Tales and its Influence on Modern Vietnamese Social
        Nguyen Thi Dung (University of Labor and Social Affairs Vietnam)

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Anthropological Aspects of Content and Language Integrated Learning and its Current Worldwide State
        Victoria Kytina (University of Kuala Lumpur)
        2:00 PM:Naming Methods of Roads, Streets and Alleys from Chinese to English in the Cultural City of Changsha, China
        Zhou Yin (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        Wong Ling Yann (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        2:30 PM:Environmental Corporate Social Responsibility of Manufacturing Industries Along Iligan Bay: A Discourse Analysis
        Venus R. Parmisana (Mindanao State University-Iligan Institute of Technology)

        General Papers: Text, Context, Entextualization

        1:30 PM:Epistemics of Discourse Marker Nah in Food Reviews in Colloquial Indonesian
        Rika Mutiara (Esa Unggul University)
        2:00 PM:Exploring Compound Word Processing by Chinese-as-a-Second-Language Learners: The Role of Morphological Awareness, Semantic Transparency, and Context
        Chun-yin Doris Chen (National Taiwan Normal University)

        General Papers: Language Socialization

        1:30 PM:The Hidden Language Socializations of for Marriage Immigrants in South Korean: Challenges and Changes
        Kamilla Pak (University of Suwon (Rep. of Korea))

        To be updated

        Thursday Parallel Sessions 1

        8:30 AM – 10:00 AM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language Ideologies

        8:30 AM:Conceptualizing the Language and Cultural Ideologies of the Kadazandusun in Borneo, Malaysia
        Trixie Tangit (Universiti Malaysia Sabah)
        9:00 AM:King of Talk, King of Listening: Backchannel Practices in ‘Tonight with Boy Abunda’
        Franz Erika Arcamo (Mindanao State University)
        9:30 AM:A New Entrepreneur is a Premature Baby: A Critical Metaphor Analysis of Malaysian Supply Bills
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)

        General Papers: Language, Gender, Sexuality

        8:30 AM:In the Gaze of Women: The Social Reproduction of Filipina Migrant Workers represented in Ten Local Mainstream Films in Recent Decades
        Elora S. Francisco (De La Salle University)
        Karlena Ameina B. Saturnino (De La Salle University)
        9:00 AM:Understand the Rape Culture Landscape in the Philippines through #HijaAko Revolution: A Multimodal Discourse Analysis
        Aileen Bautista (De La Salle University – Manila)

        General Papers: Language in Real and Virtual Spaces

        8:30 AM:Dalitisation of Cultural Behaviour: Representation of Dalithood as a Symbol within Educational Curricula and Media
        Sibansu Mukhopadhyay (Government of West Bengal)
        Titas Biswas (Jadavpur University)
        9:00 AM: Jimmy Liao and Affect: A Multimodal Study
        Xiaoyang Qi (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        Roslina Mamat (Universiti Putra Malaysia)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        8:30 AM:Chinese Numerical Proverbs using Semiotic Features to Describe Cultural Elements of Ancient Chinese Society
        He Zongjin (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        9:00 AM:Social Media Posts; Texts, and Images Iconization of Symbols
        Rimi Ghosh Dastidar (Assistant Professor, West Bengal Education Service)
        Shrestha Majumdar (Society for Natural Language and Technology Research, Kolkata)
        9:30 AM:Interlocution and Writing Stylistics in Shopping Malls in Japan
        Kida Tsuyoshi (Dokkyo University)

        General Papers: Symbolism

        8:30 AM:The Symbolism of Brinjal and Plot Number in Malaysian Tamil Folk Songs
        Kingston Pal Thamburaj (Sultan Idris education university, Malaysia)
        Logeswary Arumugum (Teacher)
        9:00 AM:Symbolic Representation of the Past and Present Local, National and Global Developments in the Linguistic Landscape of Goa
        Marta Dąbrowska (Institute of English Studies, Jagiellonian University, Cracow, Poland)
        9:30 AM:From Oppression to Modernity: Positive Innovations in the use of Western Symbols in South Korean Pop Music and Culture
        Michal Schwarz (Masaryk University, Faculty of Arts, Department of Vietnamese Studies)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        9:30 AM:The Ideologies of a New Javanese Language
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        9:00 AM:Symbols and Metaphors in the Marketing Communication of the Advertising Language
        Jyoti Kumari (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi)
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi)
        9:30 AM:Contrastive Analysis between the Yin-Yang Philosophical Concept in East Asia Cultural Sphere and Grammatical Gender in Romanic Languages
        Tak-sum Wong (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University)

        General Papers: Performance and Performativity

        8:30 AM:Expressive and Evaluative Aspects of Connotation in Hausa Court-Song: A Semantic Analysis
        Yusuf Nuhu Inuwa (Sule Lamido University, Kafin Hausa, Nigeria / Universiti Sains Malaysia)

        Keynote 2

        10:30 AM – 12:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Keynote 2: Professor. Michael Lempert

        Scale and the Linguistic Anthropology of Discursive Interaction

        Linguistic anthropologists like to stress how discursive interaction–social interaction mediated by language use–is embedded in its social, cultural, and historical context. In part this reflects anthropology’s long (if ambivalent) legacy of holism and its methodological commitment to ethnography. I argue here that this sensibility is also a response to old but stubborn debates about scale that continue to haunt the study of objects of knowledge such as “discourse,” “conversation,” and “interaction.” Focusing on interaction, I first illustrate linguistic anthropology’s integrative approach to interaction and note how it differs from adjacent traditions such as Conversation Analysis on matters of context and scale. I then turn back historically to ask how and why discursive interaction became scaled as small in the first place. In the US, when the sciences of face-to-face interaction first crystallized in the years after the second world war, many scholars came to imagine interaction as an intrinsically small-scale level of social reality that demanded fine-grained, microscopic methods, methods that often required mechanical recording technologies. Interaction’s smallness acquired a new subversive politics in the late 60s and early 70s, especially as feminist and liberal anti-racist scholars of discourse envisioned “the interpersonal” as a micropolitical domain. They promised to pinpoint patriarchy and racism with the help of recording technologies and faithful transcripts of talk. But these new scholars of the small were quickly forced to explain how this micropolitics related to a politics elsewhere and how interaction itself related to a proverbial wider world. In this talk, I retrace the many troubles that have come from treating discursive interaction as small. I argue that while interaction has no intrinsic ontological scale, this legacy of scalar contestation continues to shape what we think interaction is and what studying it can–and cannot–deliver.

         

        Thursday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:“Binajau Tambacan”: A Morphological Analysis of the Sinama Variety in Barangay Tambacan of Iligan City
        Keven O. Opamin (Mindanao State University – Iligan Institute of Technology)
        2:00 PM:Images and Symbols of the Gypsies (Roma) in the Early USSR
        Elena Marushiakova (University of St Andrews)
        Veselin Popov (University of St Andrews)
        2:30 PM:“Everyday Internet” among Tibetans in Xining (Qinghai, Northwest China)
        Giulia Cabras (Czech Academy of Sciences, Oriental Institute)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Sociolinguistic Aspects of the Linguistic Visuals across the Ganges in Varanasi
        Anil Thakur (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Pursotam Kumar (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        2:00 PM:Sociopragmatics of Translating Tourism Texts: A Case of Spiritual Tourism in India
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (Banaras Hindu University), Varanasi, India)
        2:30 PM:Produsing Press Freedom: Investigating the Mediatization of an Issue About a Philippine Online News Site on Twitter and Facebook
        Brian D. Villaverde (Southern Luzon State University)

        General Papers: Linguistic Landscapes

        1:30 PM:A Relational Analysis of Place Names and Gentrification in Southwest China
        Michela Bonato (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice)
        2:00 PM:Te Hā O Te Tangata; A Discourse Analysis of Language and the Environment
        Hone Waengarangi Morris (Massey University)
        2:30 PM:Framing the Folk in Popular Folklore: Locating Folk Influences in Philippine Creature Urban Legends
        Joseph P. Casibual Jr. (Western Mindanao State University)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Am I Not a Postcolonial Subject?
        Haris C. Adhikari (Kathmandu University)
        2:00 PM:Symbolism in Malaysian Educational Anthropology: A Corpus-Driven Analysis
        Mazura Mastura Muhammad (Sultan Idris Education University)
        Wong Wei Lun* (Sultan Idris Education University)
        2:30 PM:Are Students Becoming Less Polite? Politeness Strategies, Sociological Variables, and Social Practices in Online Communication
        Lorena Taglucop (University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        1:30 PM:Soft Masculinity Symbols in Local Skincare Brand’s Advertising
        Agustinus Rusdianto Berto (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        Oliver* (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        2:00 PM:The Symbology of Plants in Traditional Healing Techniques in Timor-Leste and its Desacralization on Social Media
        Afonso de Almeida (National University Timor Lorosa)
        Karin N.R. Indart (National University Timor Lorosa)
        2:30 PM:Between the East and West: Development of Traditional Eastern and Modern Western Symbols in Korean Pop Music
        Michal Schwarz (Masaryk University)

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:Motivation of Malaysian Undergraduate Japanese Language Learners
        Rokiah Paee (Universiti Malaysia Sarawak)
        Roswati Abdul Rashid (Universiti Malaysia Terengganu)
        2:00 PM:Code Choice in Online Media: The Case of Malaysia Muda (Young) Leaders
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Zuraidar Badaruddin* (Universiti Teknologi MARA)
        2:30 APM:Palawan’s Prime Tourist Destinations’ Tourism Landscapes and Discourse
        Janet B. Oab (Palawan State University)

        Colloquium Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Discussing Linguistic Cultural Anthropology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)

        Closing Ceremony

        5:00 PM – 6:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Talk on the success of the Conference
        Explanation of publishing
        Thank you and prospectus for SOAS GLOCAL CALA Conference 2023
        Questions and Answers
        Good bye and closing

        Tuesday Parallel Sessions 1

        10:30 AM – 12:00 PM, Tuesday, May 16, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        10:30 AM:Learning to work in Contexts of Formal Language Socialization: International Experiences and Challenges
        Victoria Kytina (University of Kuala Lumpur)
        11:00 AM:An Ethnography of Rijal Alma, Southwestern Saudi Arabia
        Michael Hadzantonis (Self Employed)
        11:30 AM:Exploring the Multiplicity of Meanings in Southeast Asian Cultural Symbols Portrayed in Raya and the Last Dragon: A Semiotic Analysis
        Adjemore A. Manabat (Mindanao State University – Iligan Institute of Technology)

        General Papers: Text, Context, Entextualization

        10:30 AM:Market Multilingualism: Evidence from the Shop Signages across the Varanasi Shopping Lanes
        Anil Thakur (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        11:00 AM:Laughter in Comic Strips in Northeast Asia
        Yihui Xia (Tohoku University (Japan))
        11:30 AM:Politics of Language: Context in Cambodia, Singapore and China
        Meng Vong* (National University of Singapore)

        General Papers: Narrative and Metanarrative

        10:30 AM:Representation of Women Rape and Ecosystem Destruction in Vietnamese Narratives on American Anti-war from Perspectives of Ecofeminism
        Le Quoc Hieu ( Institute of Literature (IoL), Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences (Vass))
        11:00 AM:Government Communication During COVID-19 Pandemic: The Antiqueño Experience
        Edbert Jay M. Cabrillos (University of Antique)
        11:30 AM:Asia and It’s New Symbolic Rise
        Mitrajit Biswas* (O.P. Jindal Global University)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        10:30 AM:A Comparative Study of British and Chinese Non-verbal Communication in “Are Our Kids Tough Enough? Chinese School”
        Hamzeh Moradi (Nanfang College, Guangzhou)
        11:00 AM:Affective Stance in Unexpected Situations: Cases from Food Reviews in Colloquial Jakartan Indonesian
        Rika Mutiara (Esa Unggul University)
        11:30 AM:Being an Integral Part of Indonesian: Memory of Chinese Indonesian Youth on Youtube
        Daniel Susilo (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara Jakarta, Indonesia)

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        10:30 AM:Sindhi Language in India- An Analysis of the effect of Homogenous Community on Language Maintenance in 3rd Generation Sindhi Speakers in North- West India
        Juhi Rajwani (Symbiosis Centre for Media & Communication, Symbiosis International (Deemed University))
        11:00 AM:Sustaining Folk Arts
        T.Sai Chandra Mouli (Independent Scholar)
        11:30 AM:Contribution of Linguistic Information from Stone Tablet, Antithetical Couplets and Horizontal Boards to Form Image of Cultural Heritage Destination in Malaysia
        Wong Ling Yann (Universiti Putra Malaysia, Malaysia)

        General Papers: Language, Gender, Sexuality

        10:30 AM:Narrativizing the Bakla Queerness: Reading Parlor as a Queer Narrative Space
        Joseph P. Casibual Jr. (Western Mindanao State University)
        11:00 AM:Discourses of Bisexuality and Sex Work in a Thai Series
        Miguel Lorenzo B. Garcia (De La Salle University, Manila; Trinity University of Asia)

        General Papers: Text, Context, Entextualization

        10:30 AM:The Symbolic Discourse of “jiko-sekinin (Self-Responsibility)” and its Semiotic Ideology in Japan
        Toshiyuki Aoyama (University of Tsukuba, Japan)
        11:00 AM:Malaysian Government’s Multi-Vocational Roles: A Conceptual Metaphor Analysis
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        11:00 AM:Transnationalism and Inequalities in Texts
        Grace M. Saqueton (University of the Philippines-Diliman)

        Tuesday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Tuesday, May 16, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language Ideologies

        1:30 PM:Layers of Inequality in Academic Writing Assessment
        Grace M. Saqueton (University of the Philippines Diliman)
        2:00 PM:Malaysian Female Riders: Through the Lens of Online Publications and Magazines
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Nur Amirah Zakaria (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        2:30 PM:Re-presenting Reform: Decolonial Globalization and Language Policy in India
        Bageshree Trivedi (The Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda, Vadodara, Gujarat, India)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Agency and Minority groups: A Linguistic Anthropology of Tribal Communities
        Debasis Patnaik (BITS Pilani K K Birla Goa Campus)
        2:00 PM:Extending on Work on Noh, Zen, and Now: Buddhism and Language
        Kim Rockell (Komazawa University)
        2:30 PM:Revisiting the History of the Creation of Bangla in the Framework of Language Contact
        Razaul Karim Faquire (University of Dhaka)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        1:30 PM:Small’ in Culture: The Cases of Thai and Korean
        Kultida Khammee (University of Phayao)
        Seongha Rhee (Hankuk Univ. of Foreign Studies, Korea and Mahidol University, Thailand)
        2:00 PM:Symbols of Emotional Metaphors in the Language of Food and Beverage Advertisements in India
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi)
        Jyoti Kumari (Indian Institute of Technology, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi)

        General Papers: Cognitive Anthropology and Language

        1:30 PM:Future Tense Usages in Trans-New Guinea Languages: A Functional-Cognitive Study
        Masahiko Nose (Shiga University)
        2:00 PM:The Poetics of Javanese Mantras: The Case of Simultaneous Signification
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        2:30 PM:Conlangs to Natlangs: Closing the Gap through Digital (Re)construction
        Menon Swathi Sivakumar (NIT Trichy)
        Dr. Vinod Balakrishnan (NIT Trichy)

        General Papers: Ethnographical Language Work

        1:30 PM:Am I My Brother’s Keeper? What the Batak Pragmatics of Favor-Asking, Apology-Making and Reciprocate Strategies Can Teach the World
        Teresita D Tajolosa (Palawan State University)
        2:00 PM:Malaysian Undergraduate Japanese Language Learners’ Learning Orientation (Qinghai, Northwest China)
        Rokiah Paee (Universiti Malaysia Sarawak)
        Hairul Nizam Ismail* (Universiti Sains Malaysia)
        2:30 PM:Review on Learning Disability – Aphasia Assessment in Malaysia
        Saeid Motevalli (UCSI University, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia)
        Celine Deanna Wei Ling Chan (UCSI University, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia)

        General Papers: Discourse Analysis

        1:30 PM:Animism in Lord Shiva Songs in Kandhapurana’s Ksdavul Vaaltthu and in his Presence Worship
        Dhilip Kumar Agilan (Independent Scholar)
        Kingston Pal Thamburaj (Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris (UPSI))
        2:00 PM:An Analysis on the Forms and Functions of Code-Switching and Code-Mixing as Communication Strategies Used by Malaysian Japanese-Language Tour Guides
        Roswati Abdul Rashid (University of Terengganu Malaysia)
        Roslina Mamat (University of Putra Malaysia)

        General Papers: Language, Contact and Change

        1:30 PM:Indigenous Language, Migration, and Sedentism of the Migrant Mamanwa in Southern Leyte, Philippines
        Angelie Genotiva (Visayas State University)
        Bethlehem A. Ponce* (Visayas State University)
        2:00 PM:Political Discourse Contiguous with Malaysia’s National Culture Policy
        Mansoureh Ebrahimi (Universiti Teknologi Malaysia)
        Siti Fatihah Selamat* (Universiti Teknologi Malaysia)

        Wednesday Parallel Sessions 1

        8:30 AM – 10:00 AM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Gender and Sexuality

        8:30 AM:Investigating Gender Bias through Gender Markings in College Students’ Essays
        Nuriza P. Jalani (Zamboanga State College of Marine Sciences and Technology)
        9:00 AM:Sexual Discourses on Female Bodies, Androcentric Biases, and Colonial Ideologies (Surveying Some Contemporary Vietnamese Prose After 1986)
        Le Quoc Hieu (Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences)
        9:30 AM:Dichotomizing Women’s Re/Presentation: Textual Inferences and Narratives
        Joseph P. Casibual Jr. (Western Mindanao State University)

        General Papers: Ethnographical Language Work

        8:30 AM:Apologies on store notices during the Covid-19 pandemic in Tokyo
        Yuko Kano (University of Tsukuba)
        9:00 AM:Communicating with Nature: Disaster Resilience Practices among the Talaandig of Talakag, Bukidnon
        Lorena Taglucop (University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines)
        9:30 AM:Exploring University of Antique’s Hashtag Culture on Facebook: The Ethnography of Communication in Virtual Space
        Edbert Jay M. Cabrillos (University of Antique, Philippines)

        General Papers: Text, Context, Entextualization

        8:30 AM:Laughter Onomatopoeia as Role Language: A Comparative Analysis of Japanese and Chinese Comics
        Yihui Xia (Guangzhou College of Technology and Business)
        9:00 AM:The Role of L2 and Cultural Awareness in Memory Recall: A Cross-Cultural Study
        Chun-yin Doris Chen (National Taiwan Normal University)
        9:30 AM:Small and Cute? Small and Bad?: Divergent Semantic Extension of Diminutive Expressions in Thai and Korean
        Kultida Khammee (University of Phayao)
        Seongha Rhee (Hankuk Univ. of Foreign Studies, Korea and Mahidol University, Thailand)

        General Papers: Language and Spatiotemporal Frames

        8:30 AM:Symbols of Spatial Representation across Languages: From English Phrasal Verbs to Hindi Complex Predicates
        Pursotam Kumar (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        9:00 AM:Chronotopic (Re) Configurations in Life Stories of Filipino Domestic Workers in Hong Kong
        Nicanor L. Guinto (Southern Luzon State University)
        9:30 AM:We are at the Center of the World : Conception of “Centrality” in Pre-Modern Geography
        Qing Wang (Beijing Normal University)

        General Papers: Language, Contact and Change

        8:30 AM:Structural Analysis of Persian-English Code-switching and Code-mixing: An Inquiry into Universal Linguistic Constraints
        Hamzeh Moradi (Nanfang College, Guangzhou)
        Liang Gao Beijing* (Information Science & Technology University)
        9:00 AM:Tragic Realities in the Narratives of Washi (Sendong) Survivors
        Merceditha C. Alicando (Iligan Institute of Technology, Mindanao State University)

        General Papers: Discourse Analysis

        8:30 AM:Wayang Symbolisms and Technology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        9:00 AM:Code-Switching and Code-Mixing in Malaysia State Election Campaign Tweets
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Nur Farah Suhada Mohamad* (International Islamic University Malaysia)

        General Session: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        8:30 AM:Lexical Meranaw Variation: A Unifying Link of the Culture’s Ideologies on Identity, Peace and Unity
        Sharifa Khalid Masorong (CSSH, Mindanao State University)
        9:00 AM:Affective Factors Socializing Malaysians into Japanese Cultural patterns
        Rokiah Paee (Universiti Malaysia Sarawak)
        Roslina Mamat (Universiti Putra Malaysia)

        10:30 AM – 12:00 PM, Thursday, November 3, 2022

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7
        • Rm 8
        • Rm 9

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:Language is Culture on Intercultural Communication
        Fatiha Guessabi (University of Bechar-Algeria)
        2:00 PM:The Role of Fingerspelling in Saudi Arabian Deaf Education
        Ahmed Alzahrani (Majmaah University, Saudi Arabia)

        General Papers: Language Ideologies

        1:30 PM:Racing Dominicans in Spain: The Construction of Language and Race among Dominican Immigrants and Spaniards in Public Discourse
        Juan R. Valdez (Independent Scholar)
        2:00 PM:Puro, Jondo and Por Derecho: Shifting Linguistic Practices of Flamenco Communities in Spain
        Marta Wieczorek (Zayed University, Dubai, United Arab Emirates)
        2:30 PM:“Poder utilizar la lengua propia es un derecho fundamental”: Language Ideologies in El Procés Trial, in Catalonia and in Spain
        Marina Carcamo Garcia (University of Arizona, U.S.)

        General Papers: Ethnographical Language Work

        1:30 PM:He Taiao He Tinana – E Rua e Rua: The Environment and the Body – One and the Same
        Hone Morris (Massey University, New Zealand)
        2:00 PM:A Linguistic Ethnographic Approach To Everyday Interactions Between The Local and Refugee Women In A Turkish Town
        Hasret Saygi (Maltepe University, Turkey)

         

        General Papers: Language and Spatiotemporal Frames

        1:30 PM:Liminality, Metaphor and Place in the Farming Landscape of Tinos: The Village of Kampos
        Maria Vidali (College Year Athens)
        2:00 PM:Contested Boundaries and Language Variants in a Balkan Capital City
        Grace E. Fielder (University of Arizona, U.S.)
        2:30 PM:Cross-Linguistic Influence in the Acquisition of Spatial Prepositions by The Albanian Learners of English As FL
        Daniela-Carmen Stoica (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)
        Anyla Saraçi (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)

        General Papers: Narrative and Metanarrative

        1:30 PM:The emergence of the post-narrativity in the era of artificial intelligence: A non-anthropocentric cybersemiotics of literary machines
        Sung-Do Kim (Korea University, South Korea)
        Jin-Young Lee (Korea University, South Korea)
        2:00 PM:Memory shaping in migration age: Amal’s walking
        Vildan Mahmutoglu (Galatasaray University, Turkey)
        2:30 PM:Recalibrating Narratives of the Jewish Holocaust
        Nicole Scott (SAOS GLOCAL)

        General Papers: Language Documentation

        1:30 PM:Linguistic Landscape as a source for minority language studies. Case of Greko
        Karolina Gortych-Michalak (Adami Mickiewicz University, Poland)
        2:00 PM:Iliad’s Achilles: A Libyco-Berber Patronymic?
        Valeria Argiolas (INALCO University, France)

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Endangered Languages: Modern Mansi Research
        Natalia Koshelyuk (National Research Tomsk State University, Russia)
        2:00 PM:Conceptual Personification of Abstract Notions in the English-Language News Discourse
        Marina Sazonova (Moscow State Linguistic University, Russia)

        Colloquium:Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 AM:Reflections of Christianity in Popular Names of Plants in Albanian and Romanian Languages
        Anyla Saraçi (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)
        Daniela-Carmen Stoica (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)
        Robert Damo (Fan S. Noli’ University of Korce, Albania)

        Colloquium: Oral heritage

        1:30 AM:Language, identity and militantism in contemporary Corsica. An investigation from a tradition of improvised singing called “chjam’è rispondi”.
        Giovanni Ragni| (Università di Corsica Pasquale Paoli|, France)

        Wednesday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:The Seasonal Calendar of the Bateq Indigenous in West Malaysia
        Roshidah Hassan (Universiti Malaya)
        Siti Zaidah Zainuddin* (Universiti Malaya)
        2:00 PM:Contestation of English and Arabic in the Building of Pesantren Culture in Indonesia
        Salimah Salimah (Universitas Airlangga)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Linguistic landscape of the Varanasi city: An initial sketch
        Anil Thakur (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Sanjukta Ghosh (IIT (BHU), Varanasi)
        2:00 PM:East Asians Accepted: The Sociolinguistic Evolution of Language Affecting How East Asian People Perceive Themselves and are Perceived by Others
        Benjamin Duke (University College London, United Kingdom)
        2:30 PM:Review on Learning Disability Interventions for Aphasia in Malaysia
        Celine Deanna Chan Wei Ling Chan (UCSI University)
        Saeid Motevalli (UCSI University)

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Language Evolution: An NCT And Conlang Framework
        Menon Swathi Sivakumar (NIT Trichy)
        Vinod Balakrishnan (NIT Trichy)
        2:00 PM:The Socialization of Local Identity to Global Context: Translingual and Transcultural Phenomena among TikTok Users
        Layli Hamida (Unviersitas Airlangga)
        2:30 PM:Çilapulapu as First Filipino Hero: Symbolic Transformation from Colonial History to Post-Colonial Commemoration During the COVID-19 Pandemic
        Christina Alexandra Guzman Morales (University of Asia and the Pacific)

        General Papers: Discourse Analysis

        1:30 PM:Nonstandard English Spelling On Social Media As An Index For Malaysian Identity
        Nur Amirah Zakaria (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        2:00 PM:Discussing Critical Linguistic Anthropology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        2:30 PM:The Symbol of the Ghosts and Devil Characters in the Fairy Tales and its Influence on Modern Vietnamese Social
        Nguyen Thi Dung (University of Labor and Social Affairs Vietnam)

        General Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Anthropological Aspects of Content and Language Integrated Learning and its Current Worldwide State
        Victoria Kytina (University of Kuala Lumpur)
        2:00 PM:Naming Methods of Roads, Streets and Alleys from Chinese to English in the Cultural City of Changsha, China
        Zhou Yin (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        Wong Ling Yann (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        2:30 PM:Environmental Corporate Social Responsibility of Manufacturing Industries Along Iligan Bay: A Discourse Analysis
        Venus R. Parmisana (Mindanao State University-Iligan Institute of Technology)

        General Papers: Text, Context, Entextualization

        1:30 PM:Epistemics of Discourse Marker Nah in Food Reviews in Colloquial Indonesian
        Rika Mutiara (Esa Unggul University)
        2:00 PM:Exploring Compound Word Processing by Chinese-as-a-Second-Language Learners: The Role of Morphological Awareness, Semantic Transparency, and Context
        Chun-yin Doris Chen (National Taiwan Normal University)

        General Papers: Language Socialization

        1:30 PM:The Hidden Language Socializations of for Marriage Immigrants in South Korean: Challenges and Changes
        Kamilla Pak (University of Suwon (Rep. of Korea))

        To be updated

        Thursday Parallel Sessions 1

        8:30 AM – 10:00 AM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language Ideologies

        8:30 AM:Conceptualizing the Language and Cultural Ideologies of the Kadazandusun in Borneo, Malaysia
        Trixie Tangit (Universiti Malaysia Sabah)
        9:00 AM:King of Talk, King of Listening: Backchannel Practices in ‘Tonight with Boy Abunda’
        Franz Erika Arcamo (Mindanao State University)
        9:30 AM:A New Entrepreneur is a Premature Baby: A Critical Metaphor Analysis of Malaysian Supply Bills
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)

        General Papers: Language, Gender, Sexuality

        8:30 AM:In the Gaze of Women: The Social Reproduction of Filipina Migrant Workers represented in Ten Local Mainstream Films in Recent Decades
        Elora S. Francisco (De La Salle University)
        Karlena Ameina B. Saturnino (De La Salle University)
        9:00 AM:Understand the Rape Culture Landscape in the Philippines through #HijaAko Revolution: A Multimodal Discourse Analysis
        Aileen Bautista (De La Salle University – Manila)

        General Papers: Language in Real and Virtual Spaces

        8:30 AM:Dalitisation of Cultural Behaviour: Representation of Dalithood as a Symbol within Educational Curricula and Media
        Sibansu Mukhopadhyay (Government of West Bengal)
        Titas Biswas (Jadavpur University)
        9:00 AM: Jimmy Liao and Affect: A Multimodal Study
        Xiaoyang Qi (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        Roslina Mamat (Universiti Putra Malaysia)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        8:30 AM:Chinese Numerical Proverbs using Semiotic Features to Describe Cultural Elements of Ancient Chinese Society
        He Zongjin (Universiti Putra Malaysia)
        9:00 AM:Social Media Posts; Texts, and Images Iconization of Symbols
        Rimi Ghosh Dastidar (Assistant Professor, West Bengal Education Service)
        Shrestha Majumdar (Society for Natural Language and Technology Research, Kolkata)
        9:30 AM:Interlocution and Writing Stylistics in Shopping Malls in Japan
        Kida Tsuyoshi (Dokkyo University)

        General Papers: Symbolism

        8:30 AM:The Symbolism of Brinjal and Plot Number in Malaysian Tamil Folk Songs
        Kingston Pal Thamburaj (Sultan Idris education university, Malaysia)
        Logeswary Arumugum (Teacher)
        9:00 AM:Symbolic Representation of the Past and Present Local, National and Global Developments in the Linguistic Landscape of Goa
        Marta Dąbrowska (Institute of English Studies, Jagiellonian University, Cracow, Poland)
        9:30 AM:From Oppression to Modernity: Positive Innovations in the use of Western Symbols in South Korean Pop Music and Culture
        Michal Schwarz (Masaryk University, Faculty of Arts, Department of Vietnamese Studies)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        9:30 AM:The Ideologies of a New Javanese Language
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)
        9:00 AM:Symbols and Metaphors in the Marketing Communication of the Advertising Language
        Jyoti Kumari (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi)
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi)
        9:30 AM:Contrastive Analysis between the Yin-Yang Philosophical Concept in East Asia Cultural Sphere and Grammatical Gender in Romanic Languages
        Tak-sum Wong (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University)

        General Papers: Performance and Performativity

        8:30 AM:Expressive and Evaluative Aspects of Connotation in Hausa Court-Song: A Semantic Analysis
        Yusuf Nuhu Inuwa (Sule Lamido University, Kafin Hausa, Nigeria / Universiti Sains Malaysia)

        Keynote 2

        10:30 AM – 12:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Keynote 2: Professor. Michael Lempert

        Scale and the Linguistic Anthropology of Discursive Interaction

        Linguistic anthropologists like to stress how discursive interaction–social interaction mediated by language use–is embedded in its social, cultural, and historical context. In part this reflects anthropology’s long (if ambivalent) legacy of holism and its methodological commitment to ethnography. I argue here that this sensibility is also a response to old but stubborn debates about scale that continue to haunt the study of objects of knowledge such as “discourse,” “conversation,” and “interaction.” Focusing on interaction, I first illustrate linguistic anthropology’s integrative approach to interaction and note how it differs from adjacent traditions such as Conversation Analysis on matters of context and scale. I then turn back historically to ask how and why discursive interaction became scaled as small in the first place. In the US, when the sciences of face-to-face interaction first crystallized in the years after the second world war, many scholars came to imagine interaction as an intrinsically small-scale level of social reality that demanded fine-grained, microscopic methods, methods that often required mechanical recording technologies. Interaction’s smallness acquired a new subversive politics in the late 60s and early 70s, especially as feminist and liberal anti-racist scholars of discourse envisioned “the interpersonal” as a micropolitical domain. They promised to pinpoint patriarchy and racism with the help of recording technologies and faithful transcripts of talk. But these new scholars of the small were quickly forced to explain how this micropolitics related to a politics elsewhere and how interaction itself related to a proverbial wider world. In this talk, I retrace the many troubles that have come from treating discursive interaction as small. I argue that while interaction has no intrinsic ontological scale, this legacy of scalar contestation continues to shape what we think interaction is and what studying it can–and cannot–deliver.

         

        Thursday Parallel Sessions 2

        1:30 PM – 3:00 PM, Wednesday, May 17, 2023

        • Rm 1
        • Rm 2
        • Rm 3
        • Rm 4
        • Rm 5
        • Rm 6
        • Rm 7

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:“Binajau Tambacan”: A Morphological Analysis of the Sinama Variety in Barangay Tambacan of Iligan City
        Keven O. Opamin (Mindanao State University – Iligan Institute of Technology)
        2:00 PM:Images and Symbols of the Gypsies (Roma) in the Early USSR
        Elena Marushiakova (University of St Andrews)
        Veselin Popov (University of St Andrews)
        2:30 PM:“Everyday Internet” among Tibetans in Xining (Qinghai, Northwest China)
        Giulia Cabras (Czech Academy of Sciences, Oriental Institute)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Sociolinguistic Aspects of the Linguistic Visuals across the Ganges in Varanasi
        Anil Thakur (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        Pursotam Kumar (Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi)
        2:00 PM:Sociopragmatics of Translating Tourism Texts: A Case of Spiritual Tourism in India
        Sanjukta Ghosh (Indian Institute of Technology (Banaras Hindu University), Varanasi, India)
        2:30 PM:Produsing Press Freedom: Investigating the Mediatization of an Issue About a Philippine Online News Site on Twitter and Facebook
        Brian D. Villaverde (Southern Luzon State University)

        General Papers: Linguistic Landscapes

        1:30 PM:A Relational Analysis of Place Names and Gentrification in Southwest China
        Michela Bonato (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice)
        2:00 PM:Te Hā O Te Tangata; A Discourse Analysis of Language and the Environment
        Hone Waengarangi Morris (Massey University)
        2:30 PM:Framing the Folk in Popular Folklore: Locating Folk Influences in Philippine Creature Urban Legends
        Joseph P. Casibual Jr. (Western Mindanao State University)

        General Papers: Sociolinguistics

        1:30 PM:Am I Not a Postcolonial Subject?
        Haris C. Adhikari (Kathmandu University)
        2:00 PM:Symbolism in Malaysian Educational Anthropology: A Corpus-Driven Analysis
        Mazura Mastura Muhammad (Sultan Idris Education University)
        Wong Wei Lun* (Sultan Idris Education University)
        2:30 PM:Are Students Becoming Less Polite? Politeness Strategies, Sociological Variables, and Social Practices in Online Communication
        Lorena Taglucop (University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines)

        General Papers: Semiotics and Semiology

        1:30 PM:Soft Masculinity Symbols in Local Skincare Brand’s Advertising
        Agustinus Rusdianto Berto (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        Oliver* (Universitas Multimedia Nusantara)
        2:00 PM:The Symbology of Plants in Traditional Healing Techniques in Timor-Leste and its Desacralization on Social Media
        Afonso de Almeida (National University Timor Lorosa)
        Karin N.R. Indart (National University Timor Lorosa)
        2:30 PM:Between the East and West: Development of Traditional Eastern and Modern Western Symbols in Korean Pop Music
        Michal Schwarz (Masaryk University)

        General Papers: Language, Community, Ethnicity

        1:30 PM:Motivation of Malaysian Undergraduate Japanese Language Learners
        Rokiah Paee (Universiti Malaysia Sarawak)
        Roswati Abdul Rashid (Universiti Malaysia Terengganu)
        2:00 PM:Code Choice in Online Media: The Case of Malaysia Muda (Young) Leaders
        Farrah Diebaa Rashid Ali (International Islamic University Malaysia)
        Zuraidar Badaruddin* (Universiti Teknologi MARA)
        2:30 APM:Palawan’s Prime Tourist Destinations’ Tourism Landscapes and Discourse
        Janet B. Oab (Palawan State University)

        Colloquium Papers: Anthropological Linguistics

        1:30 PM:Discussing Linguistic Cultural Anthropology
        Michael Hadzantonis (Independent Scholar)

        Closing Ceremony

        5:00 PM – 6:00 PM, Thursday, May 18, 2023

        Talk on the success of the Conference
        Explanation of publishing
        Thank you and prospectus for SOAS GLOCAL CALA Conference 2023
        Questions and Answers
        Good bye and closing