The graduate students of the ÍÃ×ÓÏÈÉú´«Ã½ÎÄ»¯×÷Æ· Department of Spanish andÌýPortugueseÌýinviteÌýyou to participate in the 11th annual graduate student conferenceÌýVoices of Marginality: Literary and Linguistic Reflections on Cultural Hierarchies in Spain and Latin America.
The conference will take place March 6–7,Ìý2020. This multidisciplinary event will explore the ways in which cultural and linguistic production challenges systemic manifestations of racism, sexismÌýand classism. They welcome scholars to submit original research in their respective fields of study, including but not limited to: Iberian and Latin American literatures, linguistics, sociology, philosophyÌýand political science. The deadline for submission is Dec. 15.Ìý
Submission guidelines
- Send applications to cugraduateconference@colorado.edu.
- Submissions must include name, contact informationÌýand institution.
- Abstracts and proposals may not exceed 250 words in length.
- Presentations are limited to 20 minutes and may be give in English, SpanishÌýor Portuguese. Presentations with visual aids are welcome.
Keynote speakerÌýAndrew Lynch
Lynch is a sociolinguist whose scholarship focuses on language in postmodernity, with emphasis on the situation of Spanish in the United States, the variation of Spanish in contact with other languages throughout the world, and heritage language studies. He also researches cultural and literary production among the U.S. LatinoÌýpopulation.
He is editor of the Routledge Handbook of Spanish in the Global City (2019) and co-author of El español en contacto con otras lenguas (Georgetown University Press, 2009). His studies appear in volumes published by Georgetown University Press, the University of North Carolina Press, John Benjamins Publishing, Routledge, SpringerÌýand Instituto Cervantes, among others;Ìýand in journals such as Hispania, Studies in Hispanic & Lusophone Linguistics, Language Sciences, and Language and Linguistics Compass. He serves as editor-in-chief of the Heritage Language Journal.