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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - The 26th Annual English Department
Symposium at The University of Alabama will focus on English and
Ethnicity. The program will begin on Oct. 31 and end on
Saturday, Nov. 2.
“Our focus in this symposium will be the use of English as
a resource for the representation of ethnicity as an aspect of
sociocultural identity,” said Dr. Catherine Evans Davies,
professor of linguistics, who is co-organizer with fellow
linguists Dr. Janina Brutt-Griffler, assistant professor of
English, and Dr. Lucy Pickering, assistant professor in UA’s
Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages master’s
program. “Our theoretical position is that ethnicity is
potentially an aspect of the identity of every person, and that
English can be used to signal a wide range of ethnicities in a
wide range of contexts,” she said.
The symposium includes papers that address regional, national
and international contexts in the exploration of the
relationship between English and ethnicity. Organizers are
interested in attracting a diverse audience including linguists,
literary scholars, creative writers, students, educators,
psychologists, journalists and community leaders.
Of particular note with this year’s symposium is that K-12
educators, with approval from their school districts, may
receive one continuing education unit (CEU) for the combination
of the opening lecture on Thursday evening and the Saturday
sessions. They also may receive professional development hours
for more limited participation.
Dr. Alamin Mazrui, African-American sociolinguist,
playwright, poet and public intellectual, will deliver the Oct.
31 keynote address at 7 p.m. in Morgan Hall Auditorium. Mazrui
teaches in the Department of African-American and African
Studies at the Ohio State University.
His lecture is entitled “English in the Black Experience: A
Sociolinguistics of ‘Double-Consciousness.’” Supported by
a grant from the Alabama Humanities Foundation, the state
affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities, this
lecture is free and open to the public.
On Friday, Nov. 1, Dr. Yunte Huang, of the Department of
English and American Literature and Language at Harvard
University, will deliver a lecture on “The Chinese Experience
of Basic English.” He received his master’s from The
University of Alabama.
Huang’s lecture is both a historical study of the promotion
of Basic English in modern China and a philosophical
investigation. He will describe the efforts made by I. A.
Richards, arguably the “father” of Anglo-American academic
literary criticism, to market Basic English in 1930s China as an
indispensable tool for the nation’s modernization.
On Saturday, Nov. 2, Simon J. Ortiz, a member of the Acoma
Pueblo in New Mexico, who teaches in the English department at
the University of Toronto, Canada, will deliver a paper
“Speaking for Ourselves; Maintaining Native Cultural Integrity
Despite Speaking English.”
“I’ve been a poet for 30 years,” Ortiz said, “mainly
trying to demystify language and enhance its meaning for me and
readers and listeners.” He is the author of 19 books of poetry
and prose, and he says that most of his work “focuses on
issues, concerns and responsibilities we, as Native Americans,
must have for our land, culture and community.” His most
recent book of poems is “From Sand Creek: Rising in This Heart
Which is Our America.”
Students may attend the symposium free of change. All other
registrants are asked to pay a $10 fee. For complete program
details, including speakers, times and locations, go to http://www.as.ua.edu/english/.
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