Popular linguistics

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Revision as of 21:35, 23 June 2007 by Firespeaker (talk | contribs) (Sources: removed, moving elsewhere)
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"Popular Linguistics" is an idea for a magazine presented in a plenary address to the 2007 LSA meeting by Mark Liberman (PDF of talk slides, see page 34), originally as "Linguistics Today". The name isn't terribly important at this point.

This page is set up to organise thoughts about how to go about maintaining such a magazine. I'd really like to see something like this happen, so I'm soliciting ideas. Feel free to do anything you want to this page, as long as it's constructive :)


Ideas for headlines

So articles, ads, etc in this thing will have to be things that

  • appeal to the general public
  • are accessible to the general public
  • will also, in principle, be interesting to linguists (who can go find the academic papers that certain articles might be based on for more information)
  • stand alone
  • are based on interviews, an academic paper or two, or other primary sources, but which are not academic papers themselves; see #Sources
  • are colourful :)

Basics

  • A relatively short introduction to linguistics and sources for more information in the beginning of each issue (individual articles will still have to provide necessary background information to make it interesting for and accessible to the general reader, but hopefully not in a way that bores people who know the background; even if it is a little boring, as an academic reader I'd probably still be curious how the general public was being presented with the background—I've felt this way before at least).


Linguistics flubs in popular culture

Examples of articles to include

  • feature stories on cool linguists doing cool research? (For example, if someone were to actually write an accurate and iteresting mass-market article on Nicaraguan Sign Language or Piraha, that would be nothing short of revolutionary.)
  • an etymology column to showcase the work of our hist.ling. friends?
  • some stuff on aphasias, complete with brightly-colored illustrations of brains? (brightly-colored pictures of brains, you will note from "Popular Psychology," sell.)

Advertisements

  • An overview of summer language and linguistics, with information on:
    • what's taught at each programme
    • total cost of attending each programme
    • where to go / who to contact for more information
  • Information on graduate and undergraduate linguistics and linguistics-related programmes which are accepting applications

Funding