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Gender & Language Research Group

ruth wodak

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Staff Members

Jane Sunderland

Jane SunderlanJane Sunderland is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Linguistics and English Language and a National Teaching ‘Fellow’. She convenes and teaches on the MA and PhD course 'Gender and Language'. She also teaches 'Interview Methods and Questionnaire Design' and 'Researching Language Classrooms' (doctoral courses). Jane's main administrative responsibility is to co-ordinate the 'PhD in Applied Linguistics by Thesis and Coursework' programmes in the Department. Jane initiated the Gender and Language Research group many years ago under the title of 'Language and Gender in the Classroom'. She has continued to co-ordinate it since then.

E-mail: J.Sunderland@lancaster.ac.uk

 

Paul Baker

Paul BakerPaul Baker is a senior lecturer in the Department. He has written a number of books including Sexed Texts: Language, Gender and Sexuality (2008), Using Corpora in Discourse Analysis (2006), Public Discourses of Gay Men (2003), Hello Sailor (co-authored with Jo Stanley) (2003), Polari: The Lost Language of Gay Men (2002) and Fantabulosa: A Dictionary of Polari and Gay Slang (2002). He has been a member of GAL since 1997 and is currently working on corpus based approaches to discourse analysis.

E-mail: p.baker@lancaster.ac.uk

 

Veronika Koller

Veronika KollerVeronika Koller's main research interests are in the fields of Critical Discourse Analysis and cognitive semantics, which she has combined in her study of Metaphor and Gender in Business Media Discourse (Palgrave 2004). In her book Lesbian discourses: images of a community (Routledge 2008), Veronika has developed a framework for analysing collective identity in discourse, combining socio-cognitive and discourse-historical approaches. She applies this framework in her current work, which addresses the cognitive and discursive structure of corporate brands.

E-mail: v.koller@lancaster.ac.uk

 

Ruth Wodak

Ruth WodakRuth Wodak is Distinguished Professor and Chair in Discourse Studies at Lancaster University since 1/9/2004 (personal chair). She moved from Vienna, Austria, where she was full professor of Applied Linguistics, University Vienna,since 1991 (she is still supervising some PhD students at the Department of Linguistics, University Vienna). She has stayed co-director of the Austrian National Focal Point (NFP) of the European Monitoring Centre for Racism, Xenophobia and Anti-Semitism (see http://www.eumc.eu.int for more information on the work of the EUMC and the NFP's) (now renamed European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights - FRA).

Besides various other prizes, Ruth was awarded the Wittgenstein Prize for Elite Researchers in 1996 which made six years of continuous interdisciplinary team research possible. The main projects focussed on "Discourses on Un/employment in EU organizations; Debates on NATO and Neutrality in Austria and Hungary; The Discursive Construction of European Identities; Attitudes towards EU-Enlargement; Racism at the Top. Parliamentary Debates on Immigration in Six EU countries; The Discursive Construction of the Past - Individual and Collective Memories of the German Wehrmacht and the Second World War." In October 2006, she was awarded the Woman's Prize of the City of Vienna.

Her research is mainly located in Discourse Studies (DS) and in Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA). Together with her former colleagues and Ph.D students in Vienna (Rudolf de Cillia, Gertraud Benke, Helmut Gruber, Florian Menz, Martin Reisigl, Usama Suleiman, Christine Anthonissen), she elaborated the "Discourse-Historical Approach in CDA" (DHA) in the 1990s which is interdisciplinary, problem-oriented, and analyzes the change of discursive practices over time and in various genres.

She is member of the editorial board of a range of linguistic journals, co-editor of the journal Discourse and Society and editor of Critical Discourse Studies (with Norman Fairclough, Phil Graham and Jay Lemke) and of the Journal of Language and Politics (with Paul Chilton). Together with Greg Myers, Ruth edits the book series DAPSAC (Benjamins). She was also section editor of "Language and Politics" for the Second Edition of the Elsevier Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics. Ruth chaired the Humanities and Social Sciences Panel for the EURYI award, in the European Science Foundation, 2006 - 2008.

Ruth has held visiting professorships in Uppsala, Stanford University, University of Minnesota, and Georgetown University, Washington, D.C. In the spring 2004, she had a Leverhulme Visiting Professorship at the University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK. 2007, she was awarded the Kerstin Hesselgren Chair of the Swedish Parliament and stayed at University of Örebro, Sweden, from March to June 2008.

E-mail: r.wodak@lancaster.ac.uk

 

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Last update: January 25, 2009