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Note!
- August 1 is the abstract submission deadline for the LSA's 2009 Annual Meeting in San Francisco.
Past Linguistic Institutes:
Named Professorships
return to Past Linguistic Institutes
1. Collitz ProfessorshipIn 1945, the Linguistic Society learned that it was the main legatee in the will of Klara H. Collitz, widow of Hermann Collitz, the first President of the Society. The bequest included the Collitz's residence in Baltimore and their extensive library. Mrs. Collitz's will provided that the proceeds of the sale of this property may be used to establish "the Hermann and Klara H. Collitz Professorship for Comparative Philology (i.e. 'eine Professur fur vergleichende Sprachwissenschaft')". By vergleichende Sprachwissen-schaft, Mrs. Collitz specified, "I mean the term in the sense my husband used it, i.e. including not only Germanic Philology, ancient and modern, but likewise Classical and Oriental Philology, combined with phonetics, folklore, mythology, ethnography, archaeology, dialectology, metrics and subjects related thereto. It shall be in the discretion of the Linguistic Society of America, if such Professorship is established, to select a suitable incumbent as well as a University which offers the best material for comparative Philology in the United States."
In 1963, President Mary Haas appointed a committee of former holders of the Collitz Chair to investigate matters of policy in appointing the Professor and assigning courses at the Institute to him. This committee, known as the Lane Committee, consisted of George Lane, Chair; Eric Hamp; Henry Hoenigswald; and W. Freeman Twaddell. The Lane Committee also reviewed the terms of Mrs. Collitz's bequest and reported that although structural, systematic, transformational, and other kinds of linguistics were not specifically mentioned, these, when pertinent to the subject matter, were not to be excluded. They felt that the omission was an accident of chronology and that "if Hermann Collitz were alive today, he would certainly not ignore the pertinence of a structural approach in modern Indo-European linguistics."
Collitz Professorship Holders
2005 H. Craig Melchert, U North Carolina-Chapel Hill
2003 John Rickford, Stanford U
2001 Elizabeth C. Traugott, Stanford U
1999 Sarah Grey Thomason, U Michigan
1997 Ives Goddard, Smithsonian Institution
1995 R. M. W. Dixon, National Australian U
1993 Thomas Gamkrelidze, Tbilisi, Georgia CIS
1991 Jay Jasanoff, Cornell U/Yale U
1989 Michael Silverstein, U Chicago
1987 Joseph Greenberg, Stanford U emeritus
1986 Jochem Schindler, Harvard U
1985 William Moulton, Princeton U
1983 Paul Hopper, SUNY-Binghamton
1982 Wolfgang Dressler, U Vienna
1980 Yakov Malkiel, U California-Berkeley
1979 Calvert Watkins, Harvard U
1978 George Cardona, U Pennsylvania
1977 Fang Kuei Li, U Hawaii-Manoa
1976 Ladislav Zgusta, U Illinois-Champaign/Urbana
1975 Anna Morpurgo Davies, U Oxford
1974 Raimo Anttila, U Helsinki
1973 Paul Kiparsky, MIT
1972 Warren Cowgill, Yale U
1971 Jaan Puhvel, U California-Los Angeles
1970 Hansjakob Seiler, U Cologne
1969 Gordon Fairbanks, Cornell U
1968 W. P. Lehmann, U Texas-Austin
1967 Ronald Crossland, U Sheffield
1966 Werner Winter, U Kiel
1965 F. B. J. Kuiper, Leiden U
1964 Edward Stankiewicz, U Chicago
1963 Oswald Szemerenyi, U C-London
1962 W. Sidney Allen, U Cambridge
1961 Alf Sommerfelt, U Oslo
1960 Eric P. Hamp, U Chicago
1959 Andre Martinet, U Paris
1958 Paul Thieme, Yale U
1957 Jerzy Kurylowicz, U Krakow
1956 Myles L. Dillon, Royal Irish Academy
1955 Henry M. Hoenigswald, U Pennsylvania
1954 George S. Lane, U North Carolina-Chapel Hill
1953 Murray B. Emeneau, U California-Berkeley
1952 W. Freeman Twaddell, Brown U
1951 F. Adelaide Hahn, Hunter C
1950 Franklin Edgerton, Yale U
1949 Joshua Whatmough, Harvard U
1948 E. H. Sturtevant, Yale U
2. Edward Sapir Professorship (formerly the LSA Professorship)
The Edward Sapir Professorship was established in the Fund for the Future of Linguistics as part of the Society's observance of the Sapir Centennial in 1984. A committee appointed by President Henry Kahane to study the LSA Professorship recommended that the LSA Chair be renamed the Edward Sapir Chair, effective 1 January 1986. The Executive Committee accepted this recommendation and determined that a distinguished scholar was the qualification for the Professorship.
Sapir Professorship Holders
2005 Richard Kayne, NYU
2003 Ray Jackendoff, Brandeis U
2001 Ronald Langacker, U California-San Diego
1999 Arnold Zwicky, Stanford U/Ohio SU
1997 Peter Ladefoged, U California-Los Angeles
1995 Kenneth Hale, MIT
1993 Manfred Bierwisch, Berlin, Germany
1991 Barbara Partee, U Massachusetts-Amherst
1989 Margaret Langdon, U California-San Diego
1987 David Perlmutter, U California-San Diego
1986 William Labov, U Pennsylvania
LSA Professorship Holders
1989 Emmon Bach, U Massachusetts-Amherst
1985 John Gumperz, U California-Berkeley
1983 Deirdre Wilson, U London
1982 James D. McCawley, U Chicago
1980 Joshua A. Fishman, Yeshiva U
1979 Charles Fillmore, U California-Berkeley
1978 Charles Osgood, U Illinois-Champaign/Urbana
1977 Fred W. Householder, Indiana U
1976 Joseph Greenberg, Stanford U
1975 Thomas A. Sebeok, Indiana U
1974 Morris Halle, MIT
1973 Charles Ferguson, Stanford U
1972 Robert Armstrong, U Ibadan
1971 Frank Palmer, U Reading
1970 Mary R. Haas, U California-Berkeley
1969 David Abercrombie, U Edinburgh
1968 John Lyons, U Edinburgh
1967 Yuen Ren Chao, U California-Berkeley
1966 Noam Chomsky, MIT
1965 Hans Vogt, U Oslo
1964 M. A. K. Halliday, U C-London
1963 Robert H. Robins, U London
1962 William Haas, U Manchester
1961 W. Sidney Allen, U Cambridge
3. Ken Hale ProfessorshipAt its May 2003 meeting, the LSA Executive Committee established a professorship in field methods for all future LSA Linguistic Institutes as a way to address the strongly felt need in our profession to document endangered languages and work with communities toward their preservation. Named for Ken Hale, a linguist whose dedication to studying and preserving endangered languages is legendary, the Professorship will ensure that linguistics students have access to courses that prepare them to investigate poorly documented languages even if their own institution does not offer them.
Hale Professorship Holders
2005: Mary Laughren, Jane Simpson, and David Nash
Forum Lecturers
2005
Randy Gallistel, Rutgers2003
Anthony Kroch, U Pennsylvania
Ellen F. Prince, U Pennsylvania
Janet Werker, U British Columbia
Janet Dean Fodor, CUNY Graduate Center2001
Jane Hill, U Arizona
William Labov, U Pennsylvania
Michael Tanenhaus, U Rochester
Elizabeth Bates, U California-San Diego1999
Wallace Chafe, U California-Santa Barbara
Talmy Givón, U Oregon
Emanuel Schegloff, U California-Los Angeles
Eve Clark, Stanford U1997
Ronald Langacker, U California-San Diego
Janet Pierrehumbert, Northwestern U
Masayoshi Shibatani, Kobe U
Lila Gleitman, U Pennsylvania1995
William Ladusaw, U California-Santa Cruz
John McCarthy, U Massachusett-Amherst
Mamoru Saito, Nanzan U
Carol Padden, U California-San Diego1993
Masayoshi Shibatani, Kobe U
Ted Supalla, U Rochester
Ann Cutler, Medical Research Council's Applied Psychology Unit, Cambridge
Victoria A. Fromkin, U California-Los Angeles
Ilse Lehiste, Ohio SU
Mark Steedman, U Pennsylvania