Society for Linguistic Anthropology
soclinganth.bsky.social
Society for Linguistic Anthropology
@soclinganth.bsky.social
A community for linguistic anthropologists and explorers of language in culture.

www.linguisticanthropology.org
The December 2025 issue of the Journal of Linguistic Anthropology @journaloflinganth.bsky.social has been published!

Be sure to check out visual summaries and author interviews on the JLA's social media channels:
linktr.ee/journaloflin...

anthrosource.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/15481395...
Journal of Linguistic Anthropology | AAA Journal | Wiley Online Library
Click on the title to browse this issue
anthrosource.onlinelibrary.wiley.com
December 10, 2025 at 5:52 PM
The SLA column in Anthropology News is gearing up for its 2026 issues, and proposals are now welcomed. Stories and photo essays that highlight linguistic-anthropological insights—whether through compelling narrative or striking images—are all eligible.

www.anthropology-news.org
Anthropology News - The award-winning member magazine by the AAA
The American Anthropological Association's member magazine, covering anthropology news topics ranging from Archaeology to Language.
www.anthropology-news.org
December 5, 2025 at 3:08 PM
Rosalía’s shift across many languages and Bad Bunny’s focus on Spanish reflect two different ways of using language to express culture and creativity.

hiplatina.com/rosalia-bad-...
Rosalía, Bad Bunny, and the Debate on Language and Identity in Music - HipLatina
Rosalía’s LUX and Bad Bunny’s Spanish only vision show the beauty of range in Latin music.
hiplatina.com
December 3, 2025 at 11:06 PM
Reposted by Society for Linguistic Anthropology
Tomayto Tomahto #podcast: Listening, Semiotics, and So Much More w/ guest Michael Berman
Listening, Semiotics, and So Much More w/ Michael Berman by Tomayto Tomahto
In language-centric fields we privilege the speaker. Linguistics looks at spoken or signed utterances; linguistic anthropology does as well. But Michael Berman looks at listening, which for him is a process wherein you limit or shift your language practices so as to avoid being generated as a certain type of person (often within a hierarchical relationship). That’s listening. It's about avoiding (or not) taxonomy, stereotypes, perception, and it necessitates an understanding of the power that our ears have. This episode cannot be reduced to a few thematic elements: Michael and I discuss listening, semiotics, C.S. Peirce, suffering and compassion, critiques of linguistics and other sciences, the implicit economic models undergirding scholarship, and his fieldwork in Japan—among other things. I’m struck by how much ground we cover, and yet we make a limited number of rhetorical and analytic moves. Whether we’re talking about what constitutes listening, language ideology, religion, etc.—we’re always taking the minuscule and making it representative (or symptomatic) of something bigger. Maybe that’s a paranoid reading, but I think it’s useful in the context of our conversation. What appears as an individual assessment of language is in fact a societally-engineered and collectively-upheld assessment. What appears as a certain niche orientation to data turns out to be symptomatic of widespread abuses of scientific frameworks. And, as Michael will remind us, the creation of categories and production of knowledge has effects. So let’s pay attention. This episode took inspiration from the questions that Jonathan Rosa asked in his episode on Tomayto Tomahto a year ago. Before listening to Michael, I encourage listening to Jonathan’s episode if you haven’t already. Michael BermanC.S. PeirceJonathan Rosa’s episode Toward a linguistic anthropological approach to listening: An ear with power and the policing of “active listening” volunteers in JapanReligion overcoming religions: Suffering, secularism, and the training of interfaith chaplains in JapanForms of the Affects “Why The Problem Isn’t Single-Parent Families” Why Is There So Much Fraud in Academia?This episode was written, edited, and produced by Talia Sherman. All artwork by Maja Mishevska.
creators.spotify.com
December 3, 2025 at 9:57 PM
The Society for Linguistic Anthropology invites nominations for four positions this fall. We encourage you to consider nominating yourself or another member. Each position has a three-year term.

linguisticanthropology.org/blog/2025/10...
SLA Call for Nominations - Society for Linguistic Anthropology
The Society for Linguistic Anthropology invites nominations for four positions this fall. We encourage you to consider nominating yourself or another member. Each position has a three-year term. Two p...
linguisticanthropology.org
October 27, 2025 at 5:23 PM
Reminder: The Society for Linguistic Anthropology Conference "Imagination, Creation, Critique" is next week!

Join us!

Learn more and register here: www.2025slaconference.org
May 19, 2025 at 6:13 PM
📌 The 2025 SLA conference program is now live!

🔗 www.2025slaconference.org/program
April 28, 2025 at 8:26 PM
🎙️ In SAPIENS S8E2, join linguistic anthropologist Dozandri Mendoza inside Puerto Rico’s vibrant kiki ball scene—exploring its sounds, politics & anticolonial meaning. From the runway to the DJ booth, discover how ballroom culture redefines trans survival & diasporic memory.

tinyurl.com/5n7y4adj
A Linguist’s Night at the Ball
Walk with a linguistic anthropologist through the sounds, politics, and fabulosity of a kiki ball in Puerto Rico.
tinyurl.com
April 9, 2025 at 7:41 PM
Reposted by Society for Linguistic Anthropology
Making English the official US language can’t erase the fact that the US has millions of Spanish speakers and a long multilingual history theconversation.com/...
Making English the official US language can’t erase the fact that the US has millions of Spanish speakers and a long multilingual history
Trump’s campaign produced campaign materials in Spanish to reach more voters. Now that he’s president, his White House is going English-only.
theconversation.com
March 27, 2025 at 3:42 PM
What I Wish I Knew Then… Reflections on Building a Career in Linguistic Anthropology

An SLA Online Conversation
Friday, April 4, 2025
12pm to 1:30pm Central Time (UTC-6)

Register for the Zoom meeting at: tinyurl.com/slaonline2
March 25, 2025 at 7:50 PM
Check out SLA's brand-new Starter Pack and join the conversation!

go.bsky.app/66Z6QWb
March 11, 2025 at 4:10 PM
The International Conference on Conversation Analysis (ICCA) 2026 will be held at University of Alberta, Canada (June 26-29, 2026), see icca2026.org. The conference theme is "Diversities, Language, Interaction."

#ICCA2026
ICCA 2026
Intl. Conference on Conversation Analysis
icca2026.org
March 11, 2025 at 3:45 PM
Welcome to SLA's new BlueSky account. We're really glad to be here. Please like and share our posts, and follow us here and on all other SLA platforms.
March 11, 2025 at 3:43 PM