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Laurel J. Watkins
(Ph.D., University
of Kansas, 1980)
Adjunct Associate Professor of Anthropology and Linguistics:
1990- (on leave 2006-2007)
First year at Colorado College: 1978
Office: Barnes 308
Phone Extension: 6823
E-mail: lwatkins@coloradocollege.edu
Linguistics, American Indian languages, Kiowa-Tanoan, anthropological
linguistics, language and gender, language acquisition, historical
linguistics.
Laurel Watkins has spent most
of her research career studying the Kiowa-Tanoan linguistic
family. The goals of working on endangered indigenous languages
of the Americas include grammatical descriptions of understudied
languages, collections of translated and annotated oral texts,
and diachronic comparison of sister languages to elucidate
linguistic prehistory. Such documentation contributes both
to scholarly research and to community efforts to preserve
and revitalize native languages. Her Grammar of Kiowa has
provided the foundation for Kiowa language pedagogical materials
and for linguistics students at universities world-wide.
Professor Watkins's current research, supported by the UK
Arts and Humanities Research Council, advances the theoretical
and applied goals of native language work. She and her British
colleagues are investigating the syntactic and discourse properties
of Kiowa as a polysynthetic language, the structure of which
is radically different from the European languages on which
current theory was first developed. They are also translating,
with the assistance of Kiowa elders, recently discovered archival
texts recorded in the 1970s. The latter restores linguistic
materials to the Kiowa tribe in support of their efforts to
preserve and learn their heritage language.
Courses:
AN250:
Language and Culture
AN255: Language Acquisition
AN258: Introduction to Linguistics
AN260: Language and Gender
AN360: Historical Linguistics
AN361: Grammar in Global
Perspective
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