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Susan Gal

职称:Mae & Sidney G. Metzl Distinguished Service Professor Departments of Anthropology, Linguistics, and Humanities Collegiate Division

所属学校:University of Chicago

所属院系:Department of Linguistics

所属专业:Linguistics

联系方式:(773) 702-2551

简介

Susan Gal is Mae and Sidney G. Metzl Distinguished Service Professor of Anthropology and Linguistics at the UniversityofChicago, where she has taught since 1994 and chaired the Department of Anthropology between 1999-2002. She received her B.A. in Psychology and Anthropology from Barnard College, Columbia University in 1970, and M.A (1971) and PhD in Anthropology from the University of California, Berkeley in 1976. Her research interests center on language, politics and gender in Eastern Europe; she has conducted ethnographic field research in Austria and Hungary, including both urban and rural settings. Her first book, Language Shift: Social Determinants of Linguistic Change in Bilingual Austria (Academic: 1979), examined the situation of a Hungarian minority in Austria and continues to be excerpted in standard textbooks of the field. Since then she has published widely on language ideology, linguistic variation, language change, multilingualism and its political economic sources and consequences, on political rhetoric and on the history of European linguistics. More recently she has co-authored (with Gail Kligman) a comparative and historical work entitled The Politics of Gender After Socialism (Princeton: 2000) that won the Heldt Prize of the AAASS. It has been translated into Romanian; various chapters have appeared in German, French, Hungarian and Russian. In 2001, Gal co-edited, with Kathryn Woolard, Languages and Publics: The Making of Authority (St. Jerome's Press, Manchester), that presents semiotic and linguistic approaches to understanding public communication. A selected list of her recent journal articles includes: "Contradictions of standard language in Europe: Implications for the study of publics and practices," Social Anthropology 14:2:163-181 (2006), "A semiotics of the public/private distinction," Differences: A Journal of Feminist Cultural Studies 13:1:77-95 (2002), "Bartòk's funeral: Representations of Europe in Hungarian political rhetoric," American Ethnologist 18:3:440‑458 (1991). Gal was the recipient of a Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship in 2002, as well as an SSRC-ACLS International Fellowship. She has also received Fulbright, ACLS and NIMH Fellowships. Gal is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She is currently engaged in a project on mass media and communication in the communist and postcommunist periods in the east of Europe, and another book, nearing completion, on the nature of linguistic and social differentiation.

职业经历

Susan Gal is Mae and Sidney G. Metzl Distinguished Service Professor of Anthropology and Linguistics at the UniversityofChicago, where she has taught since 1994 and chaired the Department of Anthropology between 1999-2002. She received her B.A. in Psychology and Anthropology from Barnard College, Columbia University in 1970, and M.A (1971) and PhD in Anthropology from the University of California, Berkeley in 1976. Her research interests center on language, politics and gender in Eastern Europe; she has conducted ethnographic field research in Austria and Hungary, including both urban and rural settings. Her first book, Language Shift: Social Determinants of Linguistic Change in Bilingual Austria (Academic: 1979), examined the situation of a Hungarian minority in Austria and continues to be excerpted in standard textbooks of the field. Since then she has published widely on language ideology, linguistic variation, language change, multilingualism and its political economic sources and consequences, on political rhetoric and on the history of European linguistics. More recently she has co-authored (with Gail Kligman) a comparative and historical work entitled The Politics of Gender After Socialism (Princeton: 2000) that won the Heldt Prize of the AAASS. It has been translated into Romanian; various chapters have appeared in German, French, Hungarian and Russian. In 2001, Gal co-edited, with Kathryn Woolard, Languages and Publics: The Making of Authority (St. Jerome's Press, Manchester), that presents semiotic and linguistic approaches to understanding public communication. A selected list of her recent journal articles includes: "Contradictions of standard language in Europe: Implications for the study of publics and practices," Social Anthropology 14:2:163-181 (2006), "A semiotics of the public/private distinction," Differences: A Journal of Feminist Cultural Studies 13:1:77-95 (2002), "Bartòk's funeral: Representations of Europe in Hungarian political rhetoric," American Ethnologist 18:3:440‑458 (1991). Gal was the recipient of a Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship in 2002, as well as an SSRC-ACLS International Fellowship. She has also received Fulbright, ACLS and NIMH Fellowships. Gal is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She is currently engaged in a project on mass media and communication in the communist and postcommunist periods in the east of Europe, and another book, nearing completion, on the nature of linguistic and social differentiation.

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