Project Details
Posthumanist linguistics. Communicative Practices between humans, animals, and machines a
Applicant
Dr. Miriam Lind
Subject Area
Applied Linguistics, Computational Linguistics
Term
since 2023
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 521197124
In four subprojects, the junior research group investigates the linguistic and multimodal interaction between humans, animals, and machines. It is interested in the establishment and routinisation of practices of posthumanist communication, the integration of these practices in human-human interaction, and the negotiation of ontological boundary-making between humans and nonhumans. Beyond the direct interaction between humans, animals, and voice assistants, the research group further addresses questions of language and communication ideologies that underlie the communicative encounters of animals and machines initiated by humans. It aims to symmetrically investigate the communicative relations between humans and animals, humans and machines, and animals and machines and to systematically relate the categories 'humans', 'animals', and 'machines' to each other. The overall goal is to establish an empirically based linguistic theory of posthumanist communicative practices. Methodologically, the junior research group is firmly located within qualitative interactional linguistics and makes use of videographic analysis of everyday communicative interactions as well as of participant observation and ethnographic interviews.
DFG Programme
Independent Junior Research Groups