Curriculum Vitae

Curriculum Vitae

Curriculum Vitae LINDSAY J. WHALEY Program in Linguistics office: (603) 646-2055 Reed 6086 email: [email protected] Dartmouth College http://linguistics.dartmouth.edu/people/lindsay-j-whaley Hanover, NH 03755 EDUCATION Ph.D. in Linguistics, September 1993, State University of New York, Buffalo Thesis Title: The Status of Obliques in Linguistic Theory M.A. in Linguistics, February 1990, State University of New York, Buffalo B.A., with honors, Linguistics/Religion & Theology, 1988, Calvin College POSITIONS HELD 2007-present Professor of Classics and Linguistics, Dartmouth College 2016-17 Acting Chair, Program in Linguistics 2012-2014 Interim Vice Provost, Dartmouth College 2011-2014 Associate Provost for International Initiatives, Dartmouth College 2006-2011 Associate Dean for International & Interdisciplinary Studies, Dartmouth College 2001-2011 Chair, Program in Linguistics & Cognitive Science, Dartmouth College 1999-2007 Associate Professor of Classics and Linguistics, Dartmouth College 1999-2003 Adjunct Associate Professor of Linguistics, University of North Dakota 1993-1999 Assistant Professor of Classics and Linguistics, Dartmouth College 1994-2006 Adjunct Associate Professor, Department of Philosophy, Trinity College and Seminary 1992, 1999 Visiting Assistant Professor, Summer Institute of Linguistics, University of North Dakota 1991-1992 Adjunct Assistant Professor of Linguistics, SUNY/Buffalo 1989-1993 Instructor, Intensive English Language Institute, SUNY/Buffalo 1990-1991 Instructor of Linguistics, SUNY/Buffalo 1988-1990 Teaching Assistant, SUNY/Buffalo GRANTS, FELLOWSHIPS, AND HONORS 2013-14 Porter Foundation Research Grant, ‘Sustainable Communities in the Arctic: The Land- Language Link’ (PI’s: David Peterson, James Stanford and Lindsay Whaley) 2011-12 CompX Faculty Grant, ‘Agent-Based Modeling of Sociolinguistic Contact in an Emergent System’ (PI’s: James Stanford and Lindsay Whaley) 2002-2004 National Science Foundation (SBR-0220354), ‘Investigation and Documentation of Three Endangered Languages in China’ (PI: Fengxiang Li), 2001 Academic Computing Venture Fund (with Ioana Chitoran), Dartmouth College, for bringing computer-based training to the Linguistics curriculum at Dartmouth 1999-2000 Linda B. and Kendrick R. Wilson III Fellow, Dartmouth College 1998 National Science Foundation, Research Experience for Undergraduate Award (PI’s: Lenore Grenoble and Lindsay Whaley) 1997-2000 National Science Foundation (SBR-9710091), ‘The Northwestern Tungusic Language/Dialect Continuum,’ (PI's: Lenore Grenoble, Fengxiang Li, Lindsay Whaley) 1997 Mellon Fellowship for Curricular Development, Hood Museum, Dartmouth College 1996 Dartmouth Faculty Fellowship, ‘Topics in Greek Syntax,’ winter term 1995 Hewlett Presidential Venture Fund, for hosting the Eastern States Conference on Linguistics 1995 New Hampshire Humanities Council Grant, for hosting conference ‘Endangered Languages: Current Issues and Future Prospects’ 1988-1991 Special Merit Fellowship, SUNY/Buffalo Lindsay Whaley-2 PUBLICATIONS BOOKS AND EDITED VOLUMES 2014 Suihkonen, Pirkko and Lindsay Whaley. Eds. On Diversity and Complexity of Languages Spoken in Europe and North and Central Asia. (Studies in Language Companion Series 164). John Benjamins. 2012 Malchukov, Andrej and Lindsay J. Whaley. Eds. Recent Advances in Tungusic Linguistics (Turcologica 89). Weisbaden: Harrassowitz. 2006 Grenoble, Lenore A. and Lindsay J. Whaley. Saving Languages. Cambridge University Press. 1998 Grenoble, Lenore A. and Lindsay J. Whaley. Eds. Endangered Languages: Current Issues and Future Prospects. Cambridge University Press. 1997 Whaley, Lindsay J. An Introduction to Language Typology: The Unity and Diversity of Language. Newbury Park, CA: Sage. ARTICLES Forthcoming Reo, Nicholas, Sigvanna Meghan Topkok, Nicole Kanayurak, James Standford, David Peterson, and Lindsay Whaley. ‘Environmental Change and Sustainability of Alaska Native Languages in Northern Alaska.’ (Anticipated publication date: 2019). Forthcoming Whaley, Lindsay J. ‘The Chinese Ewenki language”, in A. Vovin and J. A. A. de la Fuente (eds.) The Tungusic Languages. Routledge. (Anticipated publication date: 2019). Forthcoming Whaley, Lindsay J. The Classification of the Tungusic Languages. In M. Robbeets (ed.) The Oxford Guide to the Transeurasian Languages. Oxford University Press. (Anticipated publication date: 2019). Forthcoming Grenoble, Lenore A. and Lindsay J. Whaley. ‘Towards a New Conceptualization of Language Revitalization,’ Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development (Anticipated publication date: 2019). 2019 “Language Endangerment and the Prospect of Reviving the Orochen Language.” In catalogue for Orochen: Memories of China’s Boreal Forest. University of Hong Kong Museum, pp. 75-92. 2016 Whaley, Lindsay J. and Rebacca Asoulin. 2016. Place names in the United States and the colonial past. In Nicholas Ostler and Panchanan Mohanty (eds.) Language Colonization and Endangerment: Long-term Effects, Echoes and Reactions, 21-26. Foundation for Endangered Languages. 2014 Whaley, Lindsay J. ‘Introduction,’ in Suihkonen and Whaley (eds.) On Diversity and Complexity of Languages Spoken in Europe and North and Central Asia, xi-xviii. (Studies in Language Companion Series 164). John Benjamins. 2014 Whaley, Lindsay J. ‘Work on endangered languages’. Linguistic Discovery 12.1:1-12. 2013 Whaley, Lindsay J. ‘Some ways to endanger an endangered language project,’ in Lida Cope (ed.) Applied Linguists Needed: Cross-disciplinary Networking in Endangered Language Contexts. London: Routledge. 2012 Lulich, Steven and Lindsay J. Whaley. ‘Oroqen vowels,’ in A. Malchukov and L. J. Whaley (eds.) Recent Advances in Tungusic Linguistics (Turcologica 89), 59-78. Weisbaden: Harrassowitz. 2012 Li, Fengxiang and Lindsay J. Whaley. ‘The grammaticization cycle of causatives in Oroqen dialects’ in A. Malchukov and L. J. Whaley (eds.) 2012 Whaley, Lindsay J. ‘Deriving insights about Tungusic classification from derivational morphology,’ in Lars Johanson and Martine Robbeets (eds.) Copies versus Cognates in Bound Morphology, 395-409. Leiden/Boston: Brill. 2011 Whaley, Lindsay J. ‘The semantic effect of floating quantifiers in New Testament Greek,’ in Steven E. Runge (ed.) Discourse Studies and Biblical Interpretation, 247-262. Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software. 2011 Whaley, Lindsay J. ‘Some ways to endanger an endangered language project,’ Language and Education 25/4:339-348. 2010 Whaley, Lindsay J. ‘Syntactic typology,’ in Jae Jung Song (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Typology, 465-486. Oxford University Press. 2010 Stanford, James and Lindsay J. Whaley. ‘The sustainability of languages,’ The International Journal of Environmental, Culture, Economic and Social Sustainability 6/3:111-122. 2009 Li, Fengxiang and Lindsay J. Whaley. ‘Oroqen,’ in Martin Haspelmath and Uri Tdmor (eds.) Loanword Typology: Toward a Comparative Study of Lexical Borrowability in the World’s Languages, 525-544. John Benjamins. Lindsay Whaley-3 2007 Bouton, Jennifer and Lindsay J. Whaley. ‘Grounding in Oroqen narrative: A re-analysis of “present tense” marking,’ in Jonathan E. Cihlar, Amy L. Franklin, David W. Kaiser and Irene Kimbara (eds.), Papers from the 39th Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society (2003), Volume I: The Main Session, 1-15. 2005 Grenoble, Lenore A. and Lindsay J. Whaley. Review article on D. Bradley & M. Bradley (eds.), Language Endangerment and Language Maintenance (2002), and M. Janse & S. Tol (eds.), Language Death and Language Maintenance (2003). Language 81/4:965-974. 2005 Whaley, Lindsay J. ‘Altaic,’ in Philipp Strazny (ed.), Encyclopedia of Linguistics, Volume 1: A-L, 37-39. New York: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers. 2005 Whaley, Lindsay J. ‘Tungusic,’ in Philipp Strazny (ed.), Encyclopedia of Linguistics, Volume 2: M-Z, 1126-1129. New York: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers. 2005 Whaley, Lindsay J. ‘Typology,’ in Philipp Strazny (ed.), Encyclopedia of Linguistics, Volume 2: M-Z, 1133-1136. New York: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers. 2004 Whaley, Lindsay J. ‘Can a language that never existed be saved? Coming to terms with Oroqen language revitalization,’ in Jane Freeland and Donna Patrick (eds.), Language Rights and Language Survival, Manchester: St. Jerome’s. 2004 Li, Fengxiang and Lindsay J. Whaley. ‘The end of nomadism: Oroqen history, migration and current distribution,’ in Carsten Naeher (ed.), Proceedings of the First International Conference on Manchu-Tungus Studies (Bonn, August 28-September 1, 2000), Volume 2: Trends in Tungusic and Siberian Linguistics. Tunguso-Sibirica 9, 109-127. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. 2003 Whaley, Lindsay J. ‘The Future of Indigenous Languages.’ Futures 35:961-973. 2003 Whaley, Lindsay J. ‘Typological diversity and language endangerment,’ in Johann Vielberth and Guido Drexel (eds.), Linguistic Cultural Identity and International Communication: Maintaining Language Diversity in the Face of Globalization, (Sprachwissenschaft- Computerlinguistik 16), 173-185. Saarbrücken, Germany: AQ-Verlag. 2003 Grenoble, Lenore A. and Lindsay J. ‘The case for dialect continua in Tungusic: Plural morphology,’ in Dee Ann Holisky and Kevin Tuite (eds.), Current Trends in Caucasian, East European and Inner Asian Linguistics: Papers In Honor of Howard I. Aronson, 97-122. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. 2003 Grenoble, Lenore A. and Lindsay J. Whaley. ‘Evaluating the impact of literacy: The Case of Evenki,’ in Brian D. Joseph, Johanna DeStefano, Neil G. Jacobs and Ilse Lehiste (eds.), When Languages Collide:

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