Ep 23: Descriptive Linguistic Fieldwork with Willem de Reuse

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Field Notes

Society & Culture


This week's episode is with Willem de Reuse. Willem specializes in the description of Native American languages, particularly Siouan and Athabaskan languages. He wrote his Ph.D. dissertation on the Siberian Yupik language. He has published on morphological theory, language contact, and historical phonology and philology. He has taught at the University of Chicago, the University of Iowa, Ball State University, and the University of Arizona. His current position is at The Language Conservancy, and he also is affiliated with The University of North Texas. He is the Review Editor of the International Journal of American Linguistics, and he has written the Handbook Of Descriptive Linguistic Fieldwork (2011) with Shobhana Chelliah. He is currently conducting fieldwork in Arizona working with speakers of Apache.  Things mentioned in this episode:The Language ConservancyApache languageNavajo languageLakota languageHopi languageHän Athabaskan languageCentral Siberian Yupik languageSiouan languagesAthabaskan languagesZulu languageThe world's languages in crisis by Michael Krauss (1992)On endangered languages and the importance of linguistic diversity by Ken Hale (1998) Get in touch: Website: https://fieldnotespod.comEmail: fieldnotespod@gmail.comTwitter & Instagram: @lingfieldnotes