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CV-Woodbury-HB 2504 CURRICULUM VITAE Anthony C. Woodbury Office: Department of Linguistics; Calhoun 501; University of Texas; 1 University Station B5100 ; Austin, Texas 78712; USA; (512) 471-1701 (Phone); (512) 471-4340 (Fax); [email protected] (Email). EDUCATION 1981 Ph.D., Linguistics. University of California, Berkeley. Thesis: Study of the Chevak dialect of Central Yup’ik Eskimo (Mary R. Haas, Chair). 1975 M.A., Linguistics. University of Chicago. Master’s paper: Ergativity of grammatical processes: a study of Greenlandic Eskimo (Jerrold M. Sadock, Advisor). 1975 B.A., Linguistics. University of Chicago. (Honors). POSITIONS HELD 1980- University of Texas at Austin, Department of Linguistics. Department chair 1998-2006; professor 1997-, associate professor 1986-1997, assistant professor 1981-1986, lecturer 1980-1981. Department of Anthropology. Courtesy appointment, 1994-. PUBLICATIONS Books 1987 (Edited with Joel Sherzer). Native American discourse: poetics and rhetoric. Cambridge University Press. 246 pp. 1985 (Edited with Johanna Nichols). Grammar inside and outside the clause: some approaches to theory from the field. Cambridge University Press. 419 pp. 1984 Cev’armiut qanemciit qulirait=llu: Eskimo narratives and tales from Chevak, Alaska. Fairbanks: Alaska Native Language Center, University of Alaska. 88 pp. [Yup’ik texts with linguistic and ethnographic introduction.] Chapters in books 2011 Language documentation. In Peter K. Austin and Julia Sallabank (eds.), The Cambridge Handbook of Endangered Languages. Cambridge U.P. Pp. 159-186. 2011 Atkan Aleut "unclitic" pronouns and defniteness: A multimodular analysis. Etsuyo Yuasa, Tista Bagchi, and Katharine Beals (eds.), Pragmatics and autolexical grammar: in honor of Jerry Sadock. (Series: Linguistics Today 176) Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Pp. 125-142. 2002 The word in Cup’ik. In R.M.W. Dixon and Alexandra Aikhenvald. The status of “word”: its phonological, grammatical, cultural, and cognitive basis. Cambridge University Press. 1998 Documenting rhetorical, aesthetic, and expressive loss in language shift. In Lenore Grenoble and Lindsay Whaley, eds., Endangered Languages: Current issues and future prospects. Cambridge U.P. Pp. 234-258. 1996 Selected resources on endangered languages. In Gijna Cantoni, ed., Stabilizing indigenous languages. Flagstaff, AZ: Center for excellence in education, Northern Arizona University. Pp. 227-231. 1996 On restricting the role of morphology in Autolexical Syntax. In Eric Schiller, Barbara Need, and Elisa Steinberg, eds., Autolexical syntax: ideas and methods. Berlin: Mouton. Pp. 319- 366. Woodbury, CV 1994 (With Leo E. Moses) Five brothers and their younger sister. [Translation from Central Alaskan Yupik Eskimo, with introduction.] In Brian Swann, ed. Coming to light: Contemporary translations of Native literatures of North America. New York: Random House and Vintage Books. Pp. 15-36. 1987 (With Joel Sherzer). Introduction. In Sherzer and Woodbury, eds., Pp. 1-16. 1987 Rhetorical structure in a Central Alaskan Yupik Eskimo traditional narrative. In Sherzer and Woodbury eds., Pp. 176-239. 1986 Interactions of tense and evidentiality: a study of Sherpa and English. In Wallace Chafe and Johanna Nichols, eds. Evidentiality: the linguistic coding of epistemology. Norwood, NJ: Ablex. 1985 Noun phrase, nominal sentence, and clause in Central Alaskan Yupik Eskimo. In Nichols and Woodbury, eds. Pp. 61-88. 1985 (With Johanna Nichols). Introduction. In Nichols and Woodbury eds. Pp. 1-14. 1983 Switch reference, syntactic organization, and rhetorical structure in Central Yupik Eskimo. In John Haiman and Pamela Munro, eds., Switch reference and universal grammar. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Pp. 291-315. 1982 [Bering Sea Eskimo men’s ceremonial house: ethnographic description.] In William Fitzhugh and Susan Kaplan, Inua: spirit world of the Bering Sea Eskimo. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press. Pp. 160-63; 166-67. 1977 Greenlandic Eskimo, ergativity, and relational grammar. In P. Cole and J. Sadock, eds., Syntax and semantics 8: grammatical relations. New York: Academic Press. Pp. 307-336. Articles 2011 Archives and audiences: toward making endangered language documentations people can read, use, understand, and admire. In Nathan, David. (ed.) 2011. Proceedings of Workshop on Language Documentation and Archiving. London: Hans Rausing Endangered Language Project, SOAS. Pp. 11-19. 2007 On thick translation in linguistic documentation. Proceedings of the 2006 Hans Rausing Endangered Language Program Workshop: “Translation and language documentation" Hans Rausing Endangered Language Programme, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. 2006 (With Nora England) Training speakers of indigenous languages of Latin America at a US university. Linguistic Discovery 4(1). Online peer-reviewed journal: http://journals.dartmouth.edu/cgi- bin/WebObjects/Journals.woa/2/xmlpage/1/issue?tmpl=ld_issue 2006 (With Emiliana Cruz) El sandhi de los tonos en el Chatino de Quiahije. In Las memorias del Congreso de Idiomas Indígenas de Latinoamérica-II. Archive of the Indigenous Languages of Latin America, http://www.ailla.utexas.org/site/cilla2_toc.html. 2006 (With Hilaria Cruz) La fonología y tonología comparativa del Chatino: un informe de campo en Zacatepec. In Las memorias del Congreso de Idiomas Indígenas de Latinoamérica-II. Archive of the Indigenous Languages of Latin America, http://www.ailla.utexas.org/site/cilla2_toc.html. 2006 Ancestral languages and (imagined) creolization. Proceedings of the 2005 Hans Rausing Endangered Language Program Workshop: “Language contact and language documentation" Hans Rausing Endangered Language Programme, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. 2005 Morphological orthodoxy in Yupik-Inuit. In Ettlinger, M., N. Fleisher, and M. Park-Doob eds. 2005. Proceedings of the Thirtieth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society. Berkeley: BLS. —2— Woodbury, CV 2005 (With Nora C. England) Training speakers of indigenous languages of Latin America at a US University. Proceedings of the 2004 Hans Rausing Endangered Language Program Workshop "Training and Capacity Building for Endangered Languages Communities." Hans Rausing Endangered Language Programme, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. 2004 Defining documentary linguistics. In Peter Austin, ed., Papers in Language Documentation and Description, Volume 1. Proceedings of the 2003 Hans Rausing Endangered Languages Programme Workshop. London: School of Oriental and African Studies Working papers. 1999 Utterance-final phonology and the prosodic hierarchy: A case from Cup’ig (Nunivak Central Alaskan Yup’ik). In Osamu Fujimura, Brian D. Joseph, and Bohumil Palek, eds., Proceedings of LP ’98. Ed., Proceedings of the Fourth Linguistics and Phonetics Conference. Prague: Charles University in Prague—The Karolinum Press. Pp. 47-63. 1996 The poetics and rhetoric of overlap in a sample of Yup'ik men's house speech.' Proceedings of the Third Annual Symposium about language and society—Austin (SALSA). Texas Linguistic Forum 35:77-97. 1993 A defense of the proposition, “When a language dies, a culture dies”. Proceedings of the First Annual Symposium about language and society—Austin (SALSA). Texas Linguistic Forum 33:101-129. 1992 Prosodic elements and prosodic structures in natural discourse. Pp. 241-253 in Liberman, Mark & Cynthia McLemore (eds.), Proceedings of the IRCS Workshop on Prosody in Natural Speech. Institute for Research in Cognitive Science Technical Report No. 92--37. Philadelphia: Institute for Research in Cognitive Science, University of Pennsylvania. 1989 Phrasing and intonational tonology in Central Alaskan Yupik Eskimo: some implications for linguistics in the field. John Dunn (ed.) 1988 Mid-America Linguistics Conference papers. University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK. 1-40. 1987 Meaningful phonological processes: a consideration of Central Alaskan Yupik Eskimo prosody. Language 63(4):685-740. 1986 (With Jerrold Sadock). Affixal verbs in syntax: a reply to Grimshaw and Mester 1985, ‘Complex verb formation in Eskimo,’ (NLLT 3: 1-19). Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 4:229-244). 1985 Graded syllable weight in Central Alaskan Yupik Eskimo (Hooper Bay-Chevak. International Journal of American Linguistics 51:620-3. 1985 Marginal agent clauses in Central Alaskan Yupik Eskimo internal and external syntax. In William H. Eilfort et al., CLS 21, part 2: Papers from the parasession on causatives and agentivity. Chicago: Chicago Linguistic Society. 1985 The functions of rhetorical structure: a study of Central Alaskan Yupik Eskimo discourse. Language in Society 14(2):150-93. 1984 Eskimo and Aleut languages. [History and classification]. In David Damas, ed. Volume 5: Arctic, William C. Sturtevant, gen. ed., Handbook of North American Indians. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press. Pp. 49-63. 1977 The Greenlandic verbal suffix -ut-: interactions of linguistic form and grammatical function. In Kenneth Whistler, et al. eds., Proceedings of the third annual meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society. Pp. 251-269. Pedagogical materials 2008- (Coauthor with students) El proyecto de la documentación del idioma chatino: recursos pedagogicos. http://sites.google.com/site/lenguachatino2/ —3— .
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