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Integrationism 2.0 A conference sponsored by The International Association for the Integrational Study of Language and Communication and The Department of English, The University of Birmingham, to be held at the Conference committee: Michael Toolan (University of Birmingham), David Bade (Joseph Regenstein Library, University of Chicago), Christopher Hutton (The University of Hong Kong), Adrian Pablé (The University of Hong Kong). Format: All papers are plenary, with approximately 40 minutes for each presentation plus 20 minutes discussion. Special themes Participants may present on (1) any topic of substantive relevance to integrational linguistics and integrationism, or (2) the special themes. Please send a title and an abstract (300-500 words) to the following email addresses: M.Toolan@bham.ac.uk; dbade@uchicago.edu; chutton@hku.hk; apable@hku.hk. Deadline for abstract submission: April 15, 2011 Special Themes Roy Harris in his 1987 work The Language Machine (Duckworth) identified the idea of language as an autonomous, mechanical and self-defining system as a key component of the language myth. Harris characterized the fantasy of a language system underlying and enabling both human communicational activity and human cognition as ‘a semantics for robots, not for human beings’. This myth of the language machine has been promoted by a modern, profoundly dehumanized linguistics, but has deep roots in the Western tradition of language theorizing. The question that Harris raises is precisely what makes meaning? What makes communication possible? What makes language, including the products of the language machine, work? Contemporary sciences—including philosophy, linguistics, psychology, computer science and allied fields—assume that communication presupposes language, while Harris argues that language presupposes communication. For Harris, what makes the language machine work is the human language maker who is trying to make something happen. This conference takes The Language Machine as its point of departure, with its vision of modern societies as in the grip of a linguistic pathology: “The society which feeds and feeds off this mythology is a society in which public communication has manifestly given up on language. The very style of presentation renounces the truth in advance. Information is a verbal spiral, in which words merely beget other words.” The issue underlying this begetting of words is whether words mean something—in which case the language machine generates language even more than humans ever have—or whether we mean something by our words. The question “What do you mean?” makes sense to ask of a human being; does it make any sense to ask it of a machine or is the question itself a sign of a linguistic pathology? Semiology of Writing [E]very change in perspective from which the independence of writing is viewed brings with it an automatic re-evaluation of the boundary between the pictorial and the non-pictorial, together with a re-evaluation of the relationship between speech and language. This must be true not only for all past but for all future development in human communication. The independence of the scriptorial sign is now such as to guarantee our descendants’ re-evaluations in advance, irrespective of whether or not they still call their preferred forms of electronic literacy ‘writing’. From their point of view, needless to say, the ‘origin’ of writing may well turn out to be a point in the history of human sign-systems which we ourselves, in the late twentieth century, have not yet reached. And like us, they may continue to use the ancestral forms of writing without recognizing them for what they are. (The Origin of Writing, Duckworth, 1986) Supercategories and the Language Myth Abstract Submission: Deadline for abstract submission: April 15, 2011
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