
The Polyphony of English Studies
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Persons
Eva-Maria Graf is Associated Professor in Applied Linguistics and English Linguistics at Alpen-Adria Universität Klagenfurt (Austria). She received her PhD from Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich, where she worked as an assistant professor. She also worked at the university of St. Gallen and is currently associated with the Züricher Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaft (ZHAW).Her research interests and publications are in the areas of applied linguistics with a focus on helping professions, in particular coaching and psychotherapy, gender ideologies in language and social interaction and queer linguistics. Together with two colleagues she launched the first academic journal on coaching research in the German speaking market. In a more recent project, together with colleagues from psychology and German linguistics, she investigates into forms and functions of questions in coaching from an interdisciplinary perspective.
Univ.Prof. Dr. Werner Delanoy lehrt Fachdidaktik, Literaturwissenschaft und Culture Studies an der Alpen-Adria Universität Klagenfurt.
Guenther Sigott is Associate Professor in Applied Linguistics at the University of Klagenfurt. He has worked as a teacher and translator for general and specific purpose French and English and has taught a large range of university language courses, semantics, lexicology, text linguistics, discourse analysis, historical linguistics, research methodology and language testing. He has also worked as a teacher trainer and acted as a consultant to large-scale national test development projects for English, German and the Classical Languages. His publication focus is on C-test research and language test validation in general. He is co-editor, together with Rüdiger Grotjahn and Claudia Harsch, of the international book series Language Testing and Evaluation published by Peter Lang. His research interests are in all areas of Applied Linguistics and particularly in Language Testing and Evaluation.
Nikola Dobric is Assistant Professor (Post-Doc Assistant) in English linguistics at the Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt in Austria. He holds a doctorate in English linguistics from the Alpen-Adria Universität Klagenfurt. His current research focuses on the use of learner corpora in investigating different issues of language testing (such as test validation and writing scales). He has published in the fields of corpus linguistics, applied linguistics, semantics, lexicography, and sociolinguistics. He is the Chief Editor of the philological journal Colloquium and is also invested in promoting more open access to research.
Content
- Intro
- Table of contents
- Werner Delanoy, Alexander Onysko, Eva-Maria Graf, GuentherSigott, and Nikola Dobric: Introduction
- Jörg Helbig and Miriam H. Auer Morpheme-stories to tell in the dark: A different "THANK YOU"
- Carmen M. Amerstorfer: Keep up the good work
- Alexander Onysko: Allan James's contribution to theories of world Englishes
- Stefano Quaino: Influence of Welsh on the rhythm of Welsh English
- Smiljana Komar: The relationship between musical training and the acquisition of intonation in foreign learners of English
- Buket Bıdık and Guenther Sigott: Charting EFL writing development by means of the "Scope - Substance" error taxonomy. A pilot study
- Nikola Dobric and Ivana Cvekic: The cognitive translation hypothesis and translating proverbs - a case study of English and Serbian
- Dusan Gabrovsek: Extended "experiential" collocation brought to the fore
- Eva-Maria Graf: Forms and functions of metadiscourse in goaloriented talk-in-interaction: The case of executive coaching
- Gregor Chudoba: Seftali - Der Wortakzent im Türkischen und seine Bedeutung für den Ausspracheunterricht mit türkischsprachigen Deutschlernenden
- Ursula Doleschal: Multilingualism in Carinthia: The case of Slovene and the Slovene minority
- Werner Delanoy: Building bridges - towards a timely concept for culture-and-language learning
- Bernhard Kettemann: Orientalism/Occidentalism
- Vanessa Erat and Stefan Rabitsch: "Croeso i Gymru" - where they speak Klingon and Sindarin: An essay in appreciation of conlangs and the land of the red dragon
- Margret Holt: "Scorch" - a Welsh dragon, or Welsh identity "made simple"?
- Heinz Tschachler: "Roman Countenances" and "Abominations": Racial and ethnic stereotyping in the writings of Washington Irving
- Nursen Gömceli: Language and physicality in Enda Walsh's "Disco Pigs" (1996): A postdramatic analysis
- Contributors
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