Catherine Willmond and Pamela Munro |
Pamela MunroProfessor, UCLA Linguistics Dept.
3125 Campbell Hall UCLA Box 951543 Los Angeles CA 90095-1543 munro@ucla.edu |
My primary research involves the study of all aspects of the grammar of a number of different American Indian languages (currently focusing on Chickasaw, San Lucas QuiavinÌ Zapotec, Macuiltianguis Zapotec, Tlacolula Zapotec, Lakhota, Tolkapaya Yavapai, Garifuna, and Gabrielino, among others) and language families (especially Muskogean, Uto-Aztecan, Yuman, and Zapotecan) — syntax, phonology, lexicon, history — both through fieldwork with native speakers and through comparative research and analysis of existing descriptions. In the field of syntax, I am often concerned with problems of agreement, reference, and subjecthood. I consider it vital to make linguistic findings available to native speakers and other interested laymen through accurate, accessible descriptive and pedagogical materials, including dictionaries. I am particularly interested in working out better ways to make dictionaries, since I feel that this process generally illuminates most aspects of grammar.
Cahuilla (Uto-Aztecan / California), Chemehuevi (Uto-Aztecan / Arizona, California), Cherokee (Iroquoian / Oklahoma, North Carolina), Chickasaw (Muskogean / Oklahoma), Choctaw (Muskogean / Oklahoma, Mississippi, Louisiana), Creek-Seminole (Muskogean / Oklahoma, Florida), Crow (Siouan / Montana), Diegueño (Yuman / California), Gabrielino (Uto-Aztecan — extinct / California), Garifuna (Arawakan / Belize, Honduras, Guatemala, Nicaragua), Hopi (Uto-Aztecan / Arizona), Kawaiisu (Uto-Aztecan / California), Lakhota (Siouan / South Dakota), Luiseño (Uto-Aztecan / California), Maricopa (Yuman / Arizona), Mojave (Yuman / Arizona, California), Navajo (Athabascan / Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah), Pima (Uto-Aztecan / Arizona), Tübatulabal (Uto-Aztecan / California), Wolof (West Atlantic; Niger-Kordofanian / Senegal, Gambia), Yavapai (Yuman / Arizona), Yupik (Eskimo-Aleut / Alaska), Zapotec languages of San Lucas Quiaviní, Macuiltianguis, and Tlacolula (Zapotecan; Otomanguean / Oaxaca).
I regularly teach UCLA undergraduate courses on American Indian linguistics (Linguistics 114, which includes coverage of the structure of Chickasaw presented in collaboration with Catherine Willmond), historical linguistics (Linguistics 110), field methods (Linguistics 160), and slang (Linguistics 88A); this year I also taught beginning phonology (Linguistics 120A). I regularly teach UCLA graduate courses in field methods (Linguistics 210AB); from time to time I teach graduate courses on the structure of various language families (e.g. Muskogean, Siouan, Zapotecan), dictionary making, and other special topics. I work individually with graduate and undergraduate students in Linguistics, as well as graduate students in Applied Linguistics and American Indian Studies. I am proud to have served as the advisor or co-advisor for UCLA Ph.D.s in Linguistics and Applied Linguistics whose dissertations preserve vital information on endangered American languages, including George A. Broadwell (Choctaw), Harold D. Crook (Nez Perce), Lynn Gordon (Maricopa), Heather K. Hardy (Tolkapaya Yavapai), Felicia A. Lee (San Lucas QuiavinÌ Zapotec), Jean Mulder (Tsimshian), Doris L. Payne (Yagua), Brian C. Potter (Western Apache), Janine L. Scancarelli (Cherokee), Charles H. Ulrich (Choctaw), Cynthia A. Walker (Chickasaw), Karen K. Wallace (Crow), and Robert S. Williams (Choctaw). (And I'm certainly very proud of my other advisees and all the other students I've worked with as well.) Please email me for information about our department's weekly American Indian Linguistics seminar, at which linguists and others from a number of UCLA departments and other institutions informally present ongoing research.
I have worked with many indigenous American communities and individual community members, helping to develop orthographies and educational materials on language and providing assistance in interpreting technical published sources.