Gretchen McCulloch's Blog, page 5
March 15, 2021
January 2021: Linguistics, Language and the Public Award, end of Crash Course Linguistics, and a cappella song about Because Internet
I started off the year as usual at the Linguistic Society of America annual meeting, at which I was honoured to be the recipient of the Linguistics, Language, and the Public Award. I put up my acceptance speech as a blog post (and also a reminder that I wrote a series on how to have a career sorta like mine). Although this year was virtual and Word of the Year had been in December, it was still great to see everyone in the unofficial Gather space that I made for the conference (thanks to everyon...
December 31, 2020
2020 Year in Review
Crossposted from my blog, All Things Linguistic.
2020 wasn’t the year anyone was expecting, and I did much less travel than in previous years. But, while I was social distancing at home like everyone else, I did at least keep doing enjoyable linguistics things: Crash Course Linguistics videos went from early planning stages to nearly complete, Because Internet came out in paperback, and my podcast Lingthusiasm launched two other projects to contribute to the pop linguistics ecosystem: LingCom...
December 2020: Words of the Year
I did several media things this month on the theme of trying (insofar as it’s possible) to sum up this year: The Coronavirus’s New Words in the New York Times, Words of 2020! (and Metaphors, and Interfaces of the Year) on the a16z podcast, and a Bonus 2020 highlights episode from The Allusionist.
The Crash Course Linguistics episodes which came out this month were:
Psycholinguistics – Crash Course Linguistics #11Language acquisition – Crash Course Linguistics #12 Language change and hist...
December 23, 2020
November 2020: Proximity chat in Wired, bears in xkcd, vaccines in Jolene
I wrote an article for Wired this month summing up the results of my experiments in having more fluid conversational groupings (popularly known as “parties”) online.
The Zoom-birthday-party-slash-quiz-show is not terrible, and it is better than nothing—not to mention far better than hosting a Fun Party for Viral Particles in your friends’ respiratory tracts. But this birthday-board-meeting simply doesn’t feel like a party. (I’d hereby like to apologize to my friends who’ve hosted said Zoom g...
November 3, 2020
October 2020: More Crash Course, SBTB, #SciWri20
I had a very fun time doing this interview on Smart Podcast, Trashy Books this month, talking about the cheese plate as social technology, various language aspects of books I’ve read recently, and of course your ever-present Internet Linguistics Content. Here’s a quote:
Gretchen: So the interesting linguistic fact about Tooth and Claw is, I happen to know Jo Walton and she was telling me the story about the Japanese translation for Tooth and Claw. There’s a linguistic feature in Japanese wh...
October 6, 2020
September 2020: Crash Course Linguistics starts
Crash Course Linguistics videos started coming out this month!
This is a project I’ve been working on all year along with many excellent people, and I’m excited that the videos are finally getting to be seen, especially in a year when so much education has moved online. Stay tuned for all 16 of these 10-12 minute intro linguistics videos on Fridays until early 2021, except some holiday Fridays.
We’re also putting out accompanying issues of Mutual Intelligibility with each newsletter, tha...
September 22, 2020
August 2020: Virtual hallway experiments and bouba/kiki video
Because Internet was featured in the New York Times Paperback Row, a list of books that came out in paperback recently!
I did two experiments around creating a sort of virtual conference hallway/coffeebreak experience, since running into people in hallways is the biggest thing I miss about conferences having moved online!
I was on a Linguistics in the Pub panel about linguistics podcasting, along with my cohost Lauren Gawne (moderator) as well as Megan Figureoa and Carrie Gillon from The ...
August 14, 2020
July 2020: Because Internet in paperback!
Because Internet, my book about internet language, is now available in paperback! Links to get it in all of the formats, including how to get signed copies.
Here are some photos of the new paperback edition, same bright yellow cover, now with 10x more nice quotes from people. I also wrote an old-school reflexive blog post about what it’s like to hit the final milestone in a book journey that began in 2014. Because Internet was also featured in Paperback Row, the New York Times’s list of paperbac...
July 17, 2020
June 2020: translation & public health, LingComm Grantees, and IPA masks
I wrote an article for Wired in which I got to talk with a lot of really interesting people about the importance of language to public health: Covid-19 Is History’s Biggest Translation Challenge.
You, a person who’s currently on the English-speaking internet in The Year of The Pandemic, have definitely seen public service information about Covid-19. You’ve probably been unable to escape seeing quite a lot of it, both online and offline, from handwashing posters to social distancing tape to instr...
July 5, 2020
Top posts of 8 years of All Things Linguistic
Cross-posted from All Things Linguistic.
It’s my eight year blogiversary! Wow! Let’s celebrate by looking back at some of my favourite posts from the past year:
Because Internet
My book about internet language came out in July 2019. Here are a few of my favourite blog posts about it:
Because Internet hit the New York Times bestseller list its first week out
that classic tumblr flowing jungle river post is now cited in a real book, like an actual paper book
Linguistics jobs: interview with an i...