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American linguist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kira Hall is Distinguished Professor of Linguistics and Anthropology, as well as director for the Program in Culture, Language, and Social Practice (CLASP), at the University of Colorado at Boulder.[1][2]
Kira Hall | |
---|---|
Academic background | |
Alma mater | UC Berkeley |
Thesis | (1995) |
Academic work | |
Institutions | University of Colorado at Boulder, Department of Linguistics and Department of Anthropology |
Main interests | Sociocultural linguistics |
Notable works | Language and woman's place: text and commentaries |
Notable ideas | Tactics of intersubjectivity |
Website | University of Colorado at Boulder |
The majority of Hall's work focuses on language in India and the United States, with special attention to organizations of gender and sexuality. A special focus of her work has been the linguistic and sociocultural practices of Hindi-speaking Hijras in northern India, a nonbinary group often discussed in the anthropological literature as a "third sex."
She is known for her contributions to research on language and identity within sociocultural linguistics, and especially the tactics of intersubjectivity framework developed with Mary Bucholtz.[3]
Hall received her Ph.D. in linguistics in 1995 from the University of California at Berkeley,[4] writing her dissertation under the supervision of Robin Lakoff, and has held academic positions at Stanford, Yale, and Rutgers Universities.
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