Published: Sept. 29, 2020

queer-trans-sociophonetics-flyerThe sound of the queer voice has captured the intrigue of the popular and sociolinguistic imagination, spurring a wave of research investigating what makes someone 鈥渟ound gay鈥. While much research has sought to uncover the phonetic markers of the (cisgender, White, male) 鈥済ay sounding鈥 voice, only recently has a wave of research begun to investigate the myriad ways that queer speakers of other gender, sexual, and racial identities articulate their identities. This panel continues this trajectory, aiming to: (1) explore how understudied and marginalized queer identities鈥 including transgender, non-binary, and non-White identities鈥 are articulated using phonetic, variationist methods; (2) discuss the implications that the phonetic patterns of these speakers have on theories of sociolinguistic variation that are based on White, cisgender, heterosexual speakers and often taken for granted as if they apply universally; (3) to explore the consequences of the ways that dominant theories and methodologies in sociolinguistics don鈥檛 account for the full range of queer experiences.听

Presented by:听Linguistic Society of America Committee on LGBTQ+ Issues in Linguistics [COZIL];听Culture, Language, and Social Practice [CLASP] Program at the University of Colorado

When:听Saturday, October 24, 2020, 3:00-5:00pm Eastern (1-3 MDT)
FREE Registration:听听

AGENDA (click here for abstracts)

Introduction to Queer and Trans Sociophonetics
Jeremy Calder, SM调教所

Tran/s/gender: assessing the effects of the social construction of gender on speech. A focus on transgender /s/ realisations
James Parnell-Mooney, University of Glasgow

Variable vocal tract length as sociolinguistic feature
Lily Clifford, Stanford University

Pajara/s/ in wigs: bilingualism, latinidad, and gendered sociophonetics in Miami鈥檚 Queer Barrio
Christopher Mendoza, Florida International University

脡r-Change: shifting from 鈥渟mooth operator鈥 to 鈥渟exual modern鈥 in Beijing Queer Media听
Andrew Ting, SM调教所

Normativity in normalization: Methodological challenges in the (automated) analysis of vowels among non-binary speakers
deandre miles-hercules and Lal Zimman, University of California Santa Barbara

Audience Q&A