Linguistics Department Newsletter 2023-24
Letter from the Chair
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Hello, Friends and Members, both former and current, of the UCSB Linguistics Department!
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I hope all of you are doing well as we approach the end of the 2023-24 academic year. We wish our B.A. and Ph.D. graduates good fortune as they pursue new opportunities for travel, work, and further study. It has been a busy and exciting year of learning, teaching, research, and other activities in the department. I invite you to read
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in this newsletter about recent events and news in our department. Thank you for ongoing interest in and engagement with UCSB Linguistics. Best wishes for a relaxing and rewarding summer!
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Matt Gordon
Professor and Chair
Department of Linguistics
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My name is Jaime Pérez González. I am originally from Mexico. I am half Mayan and half Hispanic. I grew up bilingual, speaking Spanish and Tseltal. I started linguistics working on Tseltal, which is one of the native Mayan languages. And then I moved to another Mayan language called Mocho’ for my Ph.D. I am continuing the work on that language currently.
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| The Languages and Linguistics of Indigenous North America: A Comprehensive Guide. 2023, vol. 1. Carmen Dagostino, Marianne Mithun, & Keren Rice (eds.). Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. 715 pp.
The Languages and Linguistics of Indigenous North America: A Comprehensive Guide. 2024, vol. 2. Carmen Dagostino, Marianne
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Mithun, & Keren Rice (eds.). Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. 1702 pp.
In all, over 80 authors are represented, a number of them members of North American Indigenous communities themselves.
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I’m a sociocultural linguist who specializes in the role of language in racial and gender identities, especially among youth in California. I also do research on issues of institutional discourse, representation, and power, including educational, legal, and media contexts.
My most recent book-length publications are the two companion volumes Decolonizing Linguistics and Inclusion in Linguistics, which were both published by Oxford University Press in 2024.
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Undergraduate Student Spotlights
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My name is Julie Tomasulo. I am originally from San Diego, California. I graduated from UC Santa Barbara officially in December of 2021. I studied linguistics with an emphasis in speech language hearing sciences; which is speech language sciences and disorders. I minored in teaching English as a second language.
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My name is Cynthia Sierra and I majored in Ling LC&S and minored in TESOL. I graduated in 2021. I’ve taught in South Korea under the EPIK program and currently work at a library promoting literacy in children. I hope to continue pursuing work in Linguistics–I would love to try it all!
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Graduate Student Spotlights |
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I am Chloe Willis. My academic career began at UC Santa Cruz, where I got my bachelor’s in language studies, which was a program in the linguistics department. I had an emphasis in Japanese. After finishing my undergraduate degree, I lived in Japan for a few years and taught English as a second language. Then I moved back to the United States in 2017 to begin my graduate studies
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at UC Santa Barbara in the linguistics department. I got my masters and finished my Ph.D. in 2023. Now, I work as a research associate for the California Department of Justices in the research services branch.
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Karen Tsai finished her Ph.D. in linguistics in January 2023 at UC Santa Barbara. Her background was made up mostly of phonetics and phonology in Japanese linguistics. She now currently works at Amazon as a language data researcher; specifically, as a data analyst for Alexa data on Fire TV. So things people say to Alexa on Fire TV come straight her way.
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I'm originally from Aotearoa New Zealand, where my family has deep roots in the bottom part of the country through our Māori (Indigenous) heritage; we are members of the Ngāi Tahu iwi (tribe). I grew up in Ōtautahi Christchurch, where I studied applied math, linguistics, and French at the University of Canterbury.
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I moved to the U.S. to start my Ph.D. in linguistics at Stanford University in 2013. In 2020, I started at UC Santa Barbara, but I spent that entire first year teaching remotely from New Zealand due to the COVID-19 pandemic; I finally arrived on campus for the first time in Fall 2021.
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Congratulations to our Graduates! |
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Saul Alfaro
Lauren Anderson
Sofia Anaya
Courtney Aponik
Rebecca Arteaga
Jess Arviso
Monica Ascencio
Elaine Barraza
Audrey Bates
Otto Beenhouwer
Vanessa Bravo
Shaharazad Breedlove
Sean Campbell
Lana Chen
Kristin Cheung
Bethany Clements
Laila Cortez
Athena Cruz-Albrecht
Melissa Damacio Lopez
Micaela Davis
Charlotte Deng
Xenia Escalante-Lopez
Owen Firstman
Pricila Flores
Jason Galaviz
Jaqueline Galvan-Montanez
Ian Garcia
Madrid Garcia-Guijosa
Taylor Gilgren
Adrianna Gonzalez
Miriam Halbany
Alyssa Hill
Nini Hu
Monica Jiang
Estefany Jimenez Jacobo
Lauren Joensuu
Chloe Johnson
Jessica Khaw
Pauline Kim
Camille Kiss
Katie Lee
Lauren Lukacs
Monserrat Lupian
Abigail Madrid
Soyun Madrigal
Brooke Martinez
Denise Mendoza Ayon
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| Aris Merchant
Tonatiuh Meza
Maria Moreno
Jaelyn Negranza
Phoenix Neuscheler
Brooke Nielson
Grace Niu
Lauren O’Friel
Brenda Ortega
Ireland Page
Alice Park
Joseph Patrick
Isabella Phillips
Nick Pirotto
Jiani Qu
Ameena Qureshi
Alexis Ramos Figueroa
Nana Richter
Bella Santos
Chris Saucedo
Jaden See
Miranda Solis
Diana Tagliaferro
Kohei Tanaka
Violet Tejeda
Austin Thatcher
Elizabeth Thorell
Elicia Valenciano
Sydney Vargas
Mariana Venegas Plascencia
Marilyn Villalpando-Ortega
Abby Welch
Brooke Winingham
Lily Wu
Han Yang
Katie Yarbrough
Brandon Yi
Alicia Yu
Nancy Zamora
Yessica Zavala Perez
Zoe Zeelander
Patrick Zhang
Tony Zhang
Wentao Zheng
Hanna Ziccardi
Joshua Mejia-Padilla
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Guillem Belmar Viernes
Chadi Ben Youssef
Jordan Douglas
Simon Peters
Adrienne Tsikewa
Albert Ventayol-Boada
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