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Donnerstag

8:00–9:00
Frühstück/Breakfast
Cafete und RI 002
9:30–10:30
Eröffnung / Opening session
Aula der Alten Universität
11:00–12:00
Prof. Dr. Beatrix Busse: “There goes the neighborhood”: urban variational place-marking in Brooklyn, New York
KS II
12:15–13:15
Prof. Dr. Ekkehard Felder: Daten – Fakten – Agonalität: 10 gesellschaftspolitische Thesen zur Linguistischen Diskursanalyse
KS II
13:15–14:30
Mittagspause/Lunch
Cafete und RI 002
14:30–15:30
Prajit Dhar / Janis Pagel: An Information Retrieval System for Product Reviews
Raum 019
Nicolas Gasco: Video game localization
Raum 210
Joachim Peters: Emotionalisierung, Argumentationsmuster und Metaphorik im deutschen Printmediendiskurs über multiresistente Erreger
Raum 112
15:30–16:30
Aleksandra Makowska: The use of a comparable corpus in terminological analyses of research articles in microelectronics, telecommunications and computer science
Raum 019
Blanca Aparicio Larrán: Zum Fluent Speaker per App? – Fremdsprachenlernen in der Mobilwelt
Raum 210
Eike Goldammer: Between Historicity and Fictionality: Naming Patterns in the Old English Epic Poem Beowulf
Raum 112
16:00–16:30
Kaffeepause / Coffee break
Cafete
16:30–17:00
Kristin Berberich: The discursive reclamation of the Boston Marathon 2013/2014
Raum 019
Entfällt/Cancelled
Raum 210
Léon Ruffer: When the Homophobe Goes “I love you, baby Joe” – A stylistics approach to vocative norms and deviations
Raum 112
17:00–17:30
Hannah Lutzenberger: How many functions fit on a tongue? – The polyfunctionality of tongue protrusion in Kata Kolok
Raum 019
Nina Hosseini-Kivanani: Age Identity; Case Study of Kurdish speakers
Raum 210
Anna-Lisa Ndao: Which elements belong to the cognitively real set of focus alternatives?
Raum 112
20:00–21:00
Spiel/Game
Cafete und RI 002
ab 21:00
Kneipentour / Pub crawl
Zürich

Freitag

9:30–10:30
Frühstück/Breakfast
Cafete und RI 002
10:30–11:30
Prof. Dr. Anette Frank: Modal Sense Classification at Large
KS II
11:45–12:45
Dr. Simone Burel: Lingumarketing oder eine zukunftsfähige Wissensgesellschaft braucht linguistische Ansätze
KS II
12:35–14:30
Mittagspause/Lunch; anschließend Treffen des Vereins Junge Sprachwissenschaft
Cafete und RI 002
14:30–15:30
Wang Jixin: Bedeutungsanpassung bei seit-Modifikatoren
Raum 019
Olena Tykhostup: Towards a scheme for gestural analysis
Raum 013
Tobias Gretenkort / Gerrit Kotzur Lights, Camera, – Pen – Action! Embodied Simulation of Viewpoint During Narrative Reception
Raum 112
15:30–16:00
Aline Schmidt: Performing Authenticity in the 2016 US Presidential Elections
Raum 019
Francis Chen Kuan-Yuan: Chinese Children’s Comprehension of Focus Expressions in zhi & zhiyou
Raum 013
Stefanie Eckmann / Dominik Schlechtweg: Lost or Broadened? – On the Relationship between Desemanticization, Extension and Semantic Broadening
Raum 112
16:00–16:30
Kaffeepause / Coffee break
Cafete
16:30–17:00
Shawn Lin Yen-Cheng: A Study on Mitigations of English Criticism Illocution in Talent Shows
Raum 019
Julia Egger: Oh, you’re German! – Foreigner-directed speech after native-like discourse?
Raum 013
Lena Ackermann: Teaching word order variation in the German middle field
Raum 112
17:00–17:30
Katrin Parino: Tschuldigung, ich hab verschlafen – Förmlichkeit in studentischen E-Mails
Raum 019
Alla Abrosimova: External Arguments in Deverbal Compounds
Raum 013
Julia Eggers Vortrag verlegt auf 16:30 Uhr. Julia Egger’s talk takes place at 4:30 pm.
Raum 112
17:30–18:00
Katrin Parino: Tschuldigung, ich hab verschlafen – Förmlichkeit in studentischen E-Mails (Fortsetzung von oben)
Raum 019
Franziska Saur: Metaphorische Konstruktion der Welt Harry Potters
Raum 112

Samstag

9:00–10:00
Frühstück/Breakfast
Cafete und RI 002
10:00–11:00
Prof. Dr. Óscar Loureda: Konnektoren und prozedurale Bedeutung: eine experimentelle Annäherung
KS II
11:15–12:15
Prof. Dr. Vahram Atayan: „… und gleich komme ich zu meinen Ergebnissen“: unmittelbare Nachzeitigkeit in Sprachvergleich und Übersetzung
KS II
12:15–14:00
Mittagspause/Lunch
14:00–14:30
Ingo Kleiber: The Representation of the 2015 European Refugee Crisis in Online News – A Critical Discourse Analysis
Raum 019
Anna Koubová: Verbale Lehnprägung: Wie viel Deutsch steckt im heutigen Tschechischen
Raum 210
Hugo de Vos / Merijn Beeksma: Exploring historical language change through agent-based modeling
Raum 112
14:30–15:00
BuFaTa (Dominik Schlechtweg / Stefanie Eckmann / Simon Will): Linguistik in der Schule – Handlungskonzepte für mehr Sprachreflexion im Unterricht
Raum 019
Entfällt/Cancelled
Anne Wiesner: Korean and the Japonic Language Family: Some insights into how they might be related and why it is so difficult to come to a definite conclusion
Entfällt/Cancelled
Raum 210
Marianne de Heer Kloots: The influence of fluency: an EEG experiment investigating how foreign accent speech affects language comprehension
Raum 112
15:00–15:30
Christian Ebert: Wortstellung in mittelamerikanischen Sprachen: Eine Clusteranalyse
Raum 019
Entfällt/Cancelled
Łukasz Piątkowski: Satzwertige Infinitivkonstruktionen mit „zu“ im Vertrag von Lissabon und ihre Wiedergabe im Polnischen
Entfällt/Cancelled
Raum 210
Lisa Tornow: I Only Hear What I Want to Hear – Mondegreens and Speech Perception
Raum 112
15:30–16:00
Kaffeepause / Coffee break
Cafete
16:00–16:30
Burcu Kocyigit: Nationalism and Language: The Language Reform Movement in Colonial Korea, 1910–1945
Raum 019
Nicoline Erichsen, Laura Hahn, Monika Rup: Dolmetschworkshop
Raum 210
Ksenia A. Bulatova: The Concept of communicative clarity and cases of clarity disruption in political interviews with B. Obama, H. Clinton, J. Biden, J. Kerry, B. Sanders, M. Rubio and J. McCain
Raum 112
16:30–17:00
Tatiana Zefirova: Automatic extraction of personal traits
Raum 019
Nicoline Erichsen, Monika Rup: Dolmetschworkshop (separat von oben)
Raum 210
Lena Pointner: Online Language Learning – a qualitative comparison of three websites
Raum 112
ab 18:00
Abschlussplenum / Concluding session
HS 211
ab 22:00

Abstracts

Léon Ruffer: When the Homophobe Goes „I love you, baby Joe“ – A stylistics approach to vocative norms and deviations

Despite being a highly salient feature of everyday conversations, vocatives have been surprisingly neglected by linguistic literature. A closer look at this grammatical phenomenon, however, reveals how important they are to establish social relationships and even construe meaning by, for example, emphasising or contradicting with the illocutionary force of the utterance they accompany.

In this talk, I will address what linguistics has done with the vocative to give everyone a rough overview of the current state of research and a clearer image of what a vocative actually is. Then, I will present my analysis of vocatives in Tony Kushner’s contemporary drama “Angels in America”, where every character has a vocative norm (i.e. a usual way of addressing another character), which they tend to break in moments of what could be called “literary importance”. Or, to put it differently, I will explain what it means for a clearly homophobic character to say to another man “I love you, baby Joe”.

Hopefully, after this talk, listeners will have a greater appreciation of the importance of vocatives and how they can be used for literary analysis or, of course, for the analysis of everyday conversation.