Biography
I'm an Assistant
Professor of Linguistics. I'm
from Australia, and most of my fieldwork and research involves Australian
languages. My undergrad degree is in Linguistics and Classics (from ANU) and my PhD is
from Harvard,
on the historical morpho-syntax of Nyulnyulan languages (a family of
Australian languages spoken in North-Western Australia). I'm a member
of the Centre for Research on
Language Change at the Australian National University. This is what I look like.
I've moved to Yale's
linguistics department now.
Research
At the moment
I'm mostly working on language contact and reconstruction in Pama-Nyungan "border" areas - Nyulnyulan/Marrngu,
Yolŋu/Burrarran,
and Western Torres Strait/Eastern Trans-Fly. I've done fieldwork
in the first two areas mentioned and am working on (synchronic)
descriptive and learner's materials of Bardi and Yan-nhaŋu.
I was recently
awarded a grant from the NSF/NEH's Documenting Endangered Languages
Program to work on Bardi texts from the 1920's. More information
is available here.
In the same round, I was awarded an NSF
CAREER grant to work on Pama-Nyungan
and Australian prehistory. More details will be available soon here. Australian Languages: Classification and the Comparative Method is
a book I edited with Harold Koch recently (it was reviewed on the
Linguist List by Stephen Anderson here). I am interested in methodological and modelling questions
of language history and reconstruction, particularly as a consequence
of the apparent 'problems' that Australian languages pose for traditional
views of language change. I've been a critic of Punctuated Equilibrium
as applied to Australia for some time, and some of my arguments against
using such a model can be found in this
paper (Another look at Australia
as a linguistic area, published in Linguistic Areas, ed
Matras, McMahon and Vincent, 2006).
Papers
of mine of various ages and quality can be found on this site under
the "papers" link.
I moderate the HISTLING-L mailing list. If you'd like to join the
list, go to this page and fill out the form.
Some Recent
Work:
Teaching
I taught a class on historical linguistics in Australia (especially
Pama-Nyungan languages) at the 2007
LSA Institute at Stanford.
I have put the handouts from the class in a zip archive here.
Next year I will
be teaching classes on research methods, Australian languages,
and field methods.
Current Students