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职称:Director of the Language Program Senior Lecturer
所属学校:Harvard University
所属院系:Slavic Languages and Literatures
所属专业:Slavic Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics, General
联系方式:(617) 496-0624
Steven Clancy, the new Senior Lecturer on Slavic Languages and Literatures and Directof of the Language Program in the Department of Slavic Languages & Literatures comes to Harvard from the University of Chicago where he was a Senior Lecturer in Russian, Slavic Linguistics, and 2nd-Language Acquisition in the Department of Slavic Languages & Literatures and the founding Academic Director of the University of Chicago Center for the Study of Languages, which he designed and directed for seven years. His research interests include cognitive linguistics, case semantics and verbal semantics, corpus linguistics, grammaticalization, and historical linguistics. His primary languages of interest are Russian, Czech, and Polish. He is currently studying Slavic case semantics and verbal semantics utilizing various quantitative methods, including Multidimensional Scaling (MDS) and quantitative corpus linguistics. His publications include the The Chain of BEING and HAVING in Slavic and “The ascent of guy” as well as two books on Slavic case semantics with Laura Janda: The Case Book for Russian (2002), winner of the 2005 AATSEEL book award for best book in language pedagogy and The Case Book for Czech (2006). The Case Book for Polish is forthcoming. From 2007-2010 he was the president of the Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association (SCLA), an international organization for Slavic Linguists.
Steven Clancy, the new Senior Lecturer on Slavic Languages and Literatures and Directof of the Language Program in the Department of Slavic Languages & Literatures comes to Harvard from the University of Chicago where he was a Senior Lecturer in Russian, Slavic Linguistics, and 2nd-Language Acquisition in the Department of Slavic Languages & Literatures and the founding Academic Director of the University of Chicago Center for the Study of Languages, which he designed and directed for seven years. His research interests include cognitive linguistics, case semantics and verbal semantics, corpus linguistics, grammaticalization, and historical linguistics. His primary languages of interest are Russian, Czech, and Polish. He is currently studying Slavic case semantics and verbal semantics utilizing various quantitative methods, including Multidimensional Scaling (MDS) and quantitative corpus linguistics. His publications include the The Chain of BEING and HAVING in Slavic and “The ascent of guy” as well as two books on Slavic case semantics with Laura Janda: The Case Book for Russian (2002), winner of the 2005 AATSEEL book award for best book in language pedagogy and The Case Book for Czech (2006). The Case Book for Polish is forthcoming. From 2007-2010 he was the president of the Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Association (SCLA), an international organization for Slavic Linguists.