Languages and Communication Languages and Communication

48 | LANGUAGE IN SOCIETY

Language at Work: Distinction, Discrimination and Diversity
Duration
22 Jun 2026 - 26 Jun 2026
Language
English
Status
REGULAR
ECTS points
NO
Course directors :
Cecelia Cutler , City University of New York, Graduate Center (CUNY), United States
Unn Røyneland , University of Oslo, Norway
Zvjezdana Vrzić , University of Rijeka, Croatia
Karl Swinehart , University of Louisville, United States
Course description:

The Language in Society course investigates language in its social setting. The idea behind the course is to devote special sessions every year to focused topics in sociolinguistics and related fields that are capturing scholars’ attention at the current moment. 

The topic for our fourth seminar this coming up in June 22 to June 26, 2026 is:

Language at Work: Distinction, Discrimination and Diversity

The topic of the seminar is the language of worklanguages in the workplace, and language professions. The language of work concerns technical language and linguistic registers tied to specific professions and trades. The workplace suggests “brick and mortar” workplaces that demand physical co-presence and remain a dominant sphere of life and labor for millions yet we also recognize that the workspace has expanded to include online collaborations, communications on Slack, and other modes of computer-mediated communication.

Participants will present and discuss research on the enregisterment of the language of specific professions (e.g., law, medicine, business) and disciplines (e.g., philosophy, economics, psychology) and address diverse questions about language at work including, but not limited to, the following: When and how do expectations of linguistic competence enter into professional trajectories? How is competence in professional registers achieved in formal and informal contexts?  When is gatekeeping justified and when is it unjust or unnecessary? What impact do changes in the labor force have on linguistic demands of professionalization? How does the labor market impact the dynamics of language shift and maintenance among Indigenous and minoritized language speakers? How do professional registers emerge? Where have professional registers exceeded the confines of the domains to which they are presumed to belong? 

Below is the information on the themes and publications based on our previous seminars:

In 2019, the theme of the course was Language Activism and the Role of Scholars. https://iuc.hr/programme/1058. Papers from this meeting were published in the edited volume, Language Activism: The Role of Scholars in Linguistic Reform and Social Change. 

In 2022, the theme of the course was Multilingual, multilectal, and multiscriptal writing. https://iuc.hr/programme/1368. Papers from this meeting were published in the Special Issue of Sociolinguistica 39:2

In 2024, the theme was Minoritized Language and Artistic Materiality: The Role of Creative Expression in Valorizing and Legitimizing Marginalized Varieties. https://iuc.hr/programme/1856. Papers from this meeting will be published in the edited volume, Minoritized Language and Artistic Materiality: Perspectives from Europe, the Americas, and Beyond, to come out at Bloomsbury.

 

Course lecturers in 2026:

Hilario Chi Canul, University of Chetumal, México

Cecelia Cutler, City University of New York, Graduate Center (CUNY), United States

Uranela Demaj, AAB College, Kosovo

Aurora Donzelli, University of Bologna, Italy

Branka Drljača Margić, University of Rijeka, Croatia

Kellie Gonçalves, University of Bern, Switzerland

Kathryn E. Graber, Indiana University, USA

Luz Jimenez Quispe, University of San Simon, Bolivia

Dorte Lønsmann, University of Copenhagen, Denmark

Xochitl Marsilli-Vargas, Emory University, USA

Salikoko S. Mufwene, University of Chicago, USA

Toril Opsahl, University of Oslo, Norway

Verónica Pájaro, University of Agder, Norway

Bjorn Torgrim Ramberg , University of Oslo, Norway

Bjørn Ramberg, University of Oslo, Norway

Unn Røyneland , University of Oslo, Norway

Karl Swinehart , University of Louisville, United States

Cécile B. Vigouroux, Simon Fraser University, Canada

Zvjezdana Vrzić , New York University, United States

 

Attached documents
PROGRAM-Language in Society @ IUC, Dubrovnik 2026.pdf