Conference and symposium presentations
SOURCE-funded student, Cayla Sharp’s work was presented and/or accepted for presentation in multiple venues in the form of posters or oral presentations.
SOURCE-funded student, Cayla Sharp’s work was presented and/or accepted for presentation in multiple venues in the form of posters or oral presentations.
Three roundtable discussions were organized in spring 2020 with various faculty members and constituencies from across different disciplines in Syracuse University to discuss questions related to Comfort Zone: Language and Human Security.
A junior majoring in International Relations and minoring Linguistic Studies, Cayla Sharp (A&S), wins a competitive SOURCE grant.
The Department of Languages, Literatures and Linguistics (LLL) and other Syracuse University scholars publish on questions surrounding national security from multi-disciplinary, language-centered perspectives. A number of LLL linguists have contributed in areas such as forensic and computational linguistics, language and disease control, and accelerated language acquisition. LLL literary scholars teach and publish on topics of immigration, social justice, border security, medical humanities, blood and war and, thus, raise questions and contribute solutions on human security. Eagleton (1983:3) affirms that as a "particular organization of language," which has its own laws, codes, and structures, "literature forces us into dramatic awareness of language," "refreshes" our worldview and "renders objects more 'perceptible'." Language Matters to human security.
The Comfort Zones research initiative begins with a two-pronged approach to stimulate and prioritize multidisciplinary research on human security and to make our team more competitive for governmental grants. We are creating a Syracuse University think-tank to brainstorm bigger ideas, share current research within the university, inviting collaborators from other SU Colleges, Moynihan Institute and the Institute of Veterans' Affairs, among others, to dialogue with us around language and security. The first event will bring together campus scholars from across disciplines in a day-long colloquium, series of working papers and roundtable discussions. In 2021, we will host an international conference on language and its impact on national and human security. This event will unite national security and language experts to share work from perspectives in languages, sciences, social sciences, and the other humanities.
Eagleton, Terry. Literary Theory: An Introduction. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1983.