兰卡斯特大学语料库暑期学校开放课程
Lancaster Summer Schools in Corpus linguistics 2022: Open sessions
As part of the Lancaster Summer Schools in Corpus Linguistics 2022, we are offering sessions which are open to anybody who is interested in corpus-based research. The open sessions include:
A series of lectures on different topics and applications of corpus linguistics
A symposium on Innovation in Corpus Linguistics with leading experts in the field
The sessions will be delivered through MS Teams, an online platform used to deliver lectures and practical sessions. You can find the timetable for the sessions as well as links through which you can join the sessions below. All times shown on the timetable below are in UK time (BST). You can download the programme and timetable for the open sessions in pdf format from this link: Lancaster_Corpus_SS_Open sessions_2022.
Dr Vaclav Brezina: Emerging from the pandemic: what statistics lessons can corpus linguists learn? (lecture) (Monday 20th June, 5-6pm)
LINK TO THE SESSION
There are periods in history where numbers become an essential part of our shared experience. Coming out of the pandemic, we can still remember daily cases being reported on first pages of newspapers and visualisations of the trends being discussed. We were thus exposed to an unprecedented amount of statistical information with immediate consequences to our daily lives. This shared experience provides an opportunity, among other things, to reflect on our understanding of statistical information forged through the long months of this collective experience.
This lecture offers an accessible introduction to statistics in corpus linguistics with a range of engaging examples of efficient statistical techniques and visualization of linguistic data connecting these to the statistical lessons learned coming out of the pandemic.
Prof Jonathan Culpeper: Shakespeare’s Words, Words, Words: Insights via Corpus Methods (lecture) (Tuesday, 21st June, 5-6pm)
LINK TO THE SESSION
The kinds of difficulties that historical language presents corpus analysis are not generally different from those of present-day language. What differs is the degree of difficulty: historical language, especially from the more distant past, presents a chokingly thick concentration of every possible difficulty. I will touch on, amongst other things, spelling variation, words and lemmas and grammatical tagging. Along the way, I will provide insights into Shakespeare’s language, including his supposedly massive contribution to new English vocabulary.
Prof Elena Semino: Corpus linguistics and health communication: Metaphors for Covid-19 (lecture) (Thursday, 23rd June, 5-6pm)
LINK TO THE SESSION
Since the beginning of the current pandemic, Covid-19 has been talked about through metaphors, for example as an enemy to be beaten, a marathon to be completed, and a tsunami overwhelming health services. Some of these metaphors have proved controversial, however. For example, War metaphors (e.g. ‘the battle against Covid-19’) have been criticised for potentially normalising large numbers of deaths. And the metaphor of multiple ‘waves’ of the pandemic has been described as inaccurate, because, in the words of a representative of the World Health Organization: ‘We are in the first wave. There is going to be one big wave’. In this talk, I bring together corpus methods, qualitative discourse analysis and experimental research to discuss how different metaphors have been used to communicate about different aspects of the pandemic, and what the implications might be.
Lancaster Symposium on Innovation in Corpus Linguistics 2022
22 June 2022, 12.30pm – 4.30pm UK time
Organised by the ESRC Centre For Corpus Approaches to Social Science (CASS), Lancaster University, UK. The symposium will take place online via MS Teams. This symposium is free to attend. Note: Lancaster Summer Schools in Corpus Linguistics 2022 participants do not need to register separately. They will be registered automatically.
Registration is required via the following link: https://forms.office.com/r/rycyq2q3y3
Programme [UK time]
12.30 – 12.45 Introduction to the Symposium (Vaclav Brezina)
12.45 – 13.15 Corpora and healthcare communication (Elena Semino)
13.15 – 13.45 Facing the music: On Method and Mess in CADS (Gerlinde Mautner)
13.45 – 14.15 Social Media and Sociolinguistics (Jack Grieve)
14.15 – 14.30 Break
14.30 – 15.00 Corpus design (Jesse Egbert)
15.00 – 15.30 More than meets the eye, or why we should consider the process in language learning (Gaëtanelle Gilquin)
15.30 – 16.00 Data, data, data: The focus of corpus analyses (Vaclav Brezina)
16.00 – 16.30 General Discussion
The symposium offers a variety of perspectives on and applications of corpus linguistics. The focus of the symposium is on innovation in the field and the vision for the future. Each of the presenters was given the following four guiding questions to prepare their lecture.
Why is the corpus approach interesting for you personally?
Can you provide examples from your research that illustrate the value of using corpora?
Why does innovation matter in your research context?
What is your vision for corpora in your field in the future?
Participants will be able to post questions to the presenters during the symposium. Frequently asked questions will be addressed in the General discussion.
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