Language Documentation & Conservation, Volume 11, 2017Īrticle: “ LD&C possibilities for the next decade” by Nick ThiebergerĬontext: As LD&C celebrates its 10th anniversary, editor Nick Thieberger takes a look at the journal’s downloads, Facebook following, and other statistics that have brought the open-access journal’s research to linguistics scholars across the globe, and wonders how new technology will change the field in the coming decade. In 2017, MĀNOA was awarded $10,000 grant to pursue new projects in Burma and Cambodia from the National Endowment of the Arts, which is currently under threat of discontinued federal funding.Ĭross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review, Volume 6, Number 1, May 2017Īrticle: “ War Remembered, Revolution Forgotten: Recasting the Sino-North Korean Alliance in China’s Post-Socialist Media State” by Zhao MaĬontext: Scholar Zhao Ma explores the process of a nation’s remembering and forgetting the bloodshed and fervor behind a war-in this case, China’s involvement with North Korea-when it is recast through state-run media and propaganda. Charged as a counter-revolutionary in China, Yihe based her stories on the people she met while sentenced to 21 years in a remote labor prison. Volume 28 includes the work of author Zhang Yihe, whose novellas were banned in China and appear here in English for the first time. Special Volume: Red Peonies: Two Novellas of China, guest edited by Karen Gernant and Chen ZepingĬontext: Published twice a year, MĀNOA features contemporary literature from Asia and the Pacific, often in translation. MĀNOA: A Pacific Journal of International Writing, Volume 28, Number 2, 2016 Our hope is that this series will shed new light on how UH Press “sells the facts,” so to speak, and the value our 24 journals bring to our very existence. Links to each journal and article are provided below.* ![]() ![]() SubmissionsĪll submissions and editorial inquiries should be addressed to John Lynch, Editor, at is Part 3 in a series of University of Hawai`i Press blog posts celebrating University Press Week and highlighting scholarship published by UH Press journals in the past year. SubscriptionsĪnnual subscription rates are US$120 for institutions and US $40 for individuals. Oceanic Linguistics is the only journal devoted exclusively to the study of the indigenous languages of the Oceanic area and parts of Southeast Asia. ![]() Sign up to receive e-mail alerts about new issues from Project MUSE In Memoriam: Jean-Claude Rivierre, 1938–2018 by Claire Moyse-Faurieįind the full text of the issue at Project MUSE.The “Mystery Aspirates” in Philippine Languages by Robert Blust.Lexical Tone in Metnyo Ambel by Laura Arnold.The Plural Word hire in Alorese: Contact-Induced Change from Neighboring Alor-Pantar Languages by Francesca R.A Follow-up Analysis of Listener (Mis)comprehension across Language Varieties in Pentecost, Vanuatu by Cindy Schneider and Charlotte Gooskens.Counting by Tens: Specific Counting in Southeast Solomonic Languages by Deborah Hill and Paul Unger.Sex Differentiable Terms in Languages of Flores Island: A Comparative Review by Gregory Forth. ![]() Directional Systems in Philippine Languages by Maria Kristina S.Plural-Marking Strategies in Äiwoo by Åshild Næss.The Genetic Status of Lamalamic: Phonological and Morphological Evidence by Jean-Christophe Verstraete.The summer issue of Oceanic Linguistics includes the following works: ARTICLES Present-day Languages of Pentecost Island, from “A Follow-up Analysis of Listener (Mis)comprehension across Language Varieties in Pentecost, Vanuatu” by Cindy Schneider and Charlotte Gooskens in this issue of Oceanic Linguistics.
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