Alice Harris (linguist)

Alice Harris
Photo of Alice Harris
Nationality American
Scientific career
Fields Linguistics

Alice Carmichael Harris (born November 23, 1947) is an American linguist. She is currently Professor of Linguistics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, where she has been employed since 2009.

Research

Citing an early interest in the “systematic, almost mathematical aspects of languages,[1]” Harris began investigating ergativity in graduate school, and in doing so began to study the Georgian language. She was one of the first Americans allowed to do research in the Republic of Georgia when it was still part of the Soviet Union.[2] She has continued to work in this region, looking at different characteristics of the languages Georgian, Laz, Svan, Mingrelian, Udi, and Batsbi. Harris also has a strong interest in promoting the larger topic of documenting endangered languages. She played a key role in establishing the Documenting Endangered Languages (DEL) Program, a granting sub-unit that is part of the National Science Foundation.

Career

Harris received her Ph.D. in Linguistics from Harvard University in 1976 after studying at Randolph-Macon Women's College, the University of Glasgow and the University of Essex.[3]

She taught at Vanderbilt University from 1979-2002, serving as the department chair of Germanic and Slavic Languages there from 1993-2002. She was Professor of Linguistics at SUNY Stony Brook from 2002-2009.

Awards

  • In 1998, a book she co-wrote in 1995 with Lyle Campbell won the Leonard Bloomfield award from the LSA,[4] an award given out every two years to a book that makes an outstanding contribution to the understanding of languages or linguistics.
  • Harris received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2009.[5]
  • She was elected President of the Linguistic Society of America, for a term starting in 2015.[6]

Publications

  • 1981. Georgian Syntax: A Study in Relational Grammar. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Reprint published 2009.
  • 1982. "Georgian and the unaccusative hypothesis." Language.
  • 1985. Diachronic Syntax: The Kartvelian Case (Syntax and Semantics, 18). New York: Academic Press.
  • 1991. "Mingrelian." The indigenous languages of the Caucasus. Volume 1: The Kartvelian languages, 313-394. Delmar, New York: Caravan Books.
  • 1995. Alice C. Harris and Lyle Campbell. Historical Syntax in Cross-Linguistic Perspective. Cambridge University Press. [Leonard Bloomfield Book Award 1998. Chinese translation published in 2007.]
  • 2000. "Where in the word is the Udi clitic?" Language.
  • 2002. Endoclitics and the Origins of Udi Morphosyntax. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • 2003. "Cross-linguistic Perspectives on linguistic change." The Handbook of Historical Linguistics.
  • 2008. "Reconstruction in syntax: reconstruction of patterns." Principles of syntactic reconstruction. G. Ferraresi, and M. Goldbach, eds. John Benjamins.

References

  1. "LinguistList--Famous Linguists". Retrieved May 17, 2015.
  2. "John Simon Guggenheim Foundation". Retrieved May 17, 2015.
  3. "Brief CV" (PDF). UMA. Retrieved 3 January 2016.
  4. Falk, Julia S., Julia S. (1999). Women, Language and Linguistics: Three American Stories from the First Half of the Twentieth Century. Studies in the History of Linguistics. New York: Routledge. p. 260.
  5. "John Simon Guggenheim Foundation". Retrieved May 17, 2015.
  6. "LSA Election Results". Retrieved May 17, 2015.
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