Please note: You are viewing the unstyled version of this web site. Either your browser does not support CSS (cascading style sheets) or it has been disabled.

Department of Linguistics

HOME | NEWS | ABOUT US | CENTRES & GROUPS | UNDERGRADUATE | POSTGRADUATE | STUDENT SUPPORT | RESEARCH

You are here: Department of Linguistics >> Centres & Groups >> Centre of Language in Social Life >> Research

Local Navigation


Quicklinks






Information for


Search Linguistics


Research

Research Contexts

Discourse Modelling

Consultancy Work

Visiting Researchers' Program

Post Doctoral Fellowships

PhD Program

 

Research Contexts

The Centre for Language in Social Life conducts projects across a wide range of research contexts. Together, these contexts form a web of domains of social life where language is a crucial mode of action and reflection. These research contexts are all significant for the development and flourishing of individuals and social groups; they are often ones in which there is a need to reduce economic and social disadvantage and in which it is possible to collaborate with specialists in relevant professional and public environments. They are all contexts in which language must be reliably modelled in order to answer broader social questions and ultimately achieve social change.

Currently the Centre undertakes projects in:

Current research projects

Previous research projects

Discourse Modelling

Research projects are chosen that are socially significant and which can, at the same time, reflexively contribute to developing tools for modelling discourse.

In order to account for the specific effects of, and constraints on, language in any one social context, theoretical tools that have been developed from real language in use and tested across a wide range of language situations are required. These enable identification of key discourse patterns and pressures that language users need to be able to manage across the modes of social life. These tools also make it possible to highlight discourse factors that are important for understanding general cultural phenomena across seemingly disparate social contexts.

To this end the Centre brings together linguistic expertise that can produce systematic accounts at all levels of discourse patterning: from intonation and graphology, through wording and grammar, to consistencies in semantic and generic structures, and the contextual variables of the speech/language situation. The accounts draw on and contribute to the development of a range of theoretical approaches, in particular Systemic Functional Linguistics , Critical Discourse Analysis, Interactional Sociolinguistics, Multimodal Discourse Analysis & Construction, and Stylistics . Within each of these frameworks, a distinctive feature of the Centre's work is its focus on corpus methods and computational tools.

Consultancy Work

The Centre works with practitioners in many professional and clinical areas to explore critically important features of their contexts of communication. In the recent past, practitioners from areas including fuzzy computing, computational linguistics, clinical trials, genetic counselling, palliative care, capital markets and mediation have sought the Centre's expertise in mapping specific aspects of communication and in developing collaborative proposals for changes to existing practices to improve service outcomes. If you are interested in the consultancy work of the Centre please contact the Director, A/Prof David Butt.

Visiting Researcher's Program

The Centre welcomes researchers with interests closely related to its objectives. See the Visiting Researchers' Program Information Sheet and Application Form.

Post Doctoral Fellowships

There are currently two Post Doctoral Fellows working at the Centre:

Dr Alison Moore
Dr Annabelle Lukin

For information on Post Doctoral Fellowships at Macquarie University contact the Research Office .

PhD Program

The Centre welcomes students who wish to complete PhDs on topics related to its objectives. The Centre currently supports over 30 PhD students.

 

 

 

[Back to top]

Copyright & Site information

  • CRICOS Provider No 00002J, ABN 90 952 801 237
  • Last Updated: Thursday, 18 September 2008
  • Authorised by: Linguistics Webmaster