De-localising Dialect

Lead Research Organisation: Northumbria University
Department Name: Fac of Arts, Design and Social Sciences

Abstract

'De-localising Dialect' (DLD) is an interdisciplinary research network of international academics, artists, critics, linguists and writers. Its aim is to develop new creative and critical practices for and about vernacular language art, with a focus on dialect viewed and deployed against its own deep associations with geographic locality and social rootedness.

The network will address pre-conceived notions about the sited nature of dialect (i.e. that dialect cannot 'travel' as critical language but instead may only occur meaningfully in specific localised instances), and challenge how dialect "has been historically devalued and marginalised, especially in educational settings, as a central part of an ideology of language standardisation" (Ahmad: 2011).

DLD is aligned with the current AHRC theme of 'Translating Cultures', actively engaging with the theme's first key strategic objective, "to develop knowledge of the nature of translation as a process that occurs across different languages, cultures, generations, media, genres and sectors. This permits in particular an emphasis on exploration of the cultural dynamics of translation, as well as on analysis of its distinctiveness in relation to other processes of interpretation, transfer, imitation, transformation and exchange".

The network will run for 12 months, starting in April 2018. We will meet on three occasions across the 12-month period. Each network event will be led by the P-I and the Co-I, with three invited speakers from each of the interdisciplinary fields of art, literature and sociolinguistics - and will take place in three different non-academic locations, as follows:
The Common Guild, Glasgow
The Metropolitan Arts Centre, Belfast
The British Library, London

The network activities will employ a multi-disciplinary methodology. Each of the three workshops will take as its starting point the main methodological approach of one of the three disciplinary fields (i.e. art, literature, sociolinguistics) and apply it to one chosen item of study (which might be an art work, a text, a sound recording). The expert speaker from that field will lead a practice-based workshop which will equip participants in this method, thereby sharing knowledge and practical research methods. This process will be recorded, along with relevant additional materials will be made available via the project's website. Each workshop will be documented in video form and these files will be made available on the website (via Vimeo), so that the methodological processes of the workshop is made visible and utile for other user-groups. The findings in an accessible manner, through the website and associated -emailouts from the partner organisations.

Whilst the workshop attendees will be comprised of guest speakers and locally-based researchers, all network members will be in continued contact across the year-long project: this will be facilitated by the PI and Co-I.

Planned Impact

DLD is an important and pressing project because it will develop new creative and critical practices for and about dialect, untethering and exploring dialect from geographical location.

Recent examples of feature articles in the national press lamenting the prevalence of 'International Art English' in public institutions writing on art and design (Andy Beckett's 'A User's Guide to Artspeak' in The Guardian, UK, 2013) and international specialist art journal (David Levine and Alix Rule's 'International Art English' in Triple Canopy, USA, 2015) demonstrate main-stream interest in this area; DLD seeks to harness and interrogate this interest.

Given our contemporary globalised writing cultures and the valorisation or otherwise of geographically rooted 'literary' or 'critical' forms of writing (as evidenced in the references outlined in the Academic Beneficiaries section of this application), this project has strong impact potential outwith of academia, in the following ways:

DLD will involve three non-academic partners, The Common Guild, Glasgow, The Metropolitan Arts Centre, Belfast and the Oral History Archive at The British Library, London, situated in diverse locations across the UK. The project will be publicised through these organisations' mailing lists and networks, and each workshop's content will subsequently be made publically available through the website as the research progresses. Informal agreements have been secured with these organisations to link with and publicise the DLD website; thereby facilitating a wider spread of audience.

These three partners will each benefit by increasing their knowledge in the interdisciplinary research area; broadening their contacts; learning new methods and skills; being able to do work / apply for funding they wouldn't otherwise be able to do.

In addition, the non-academic audiences associated with the organisations will gain insight, and crucially, methods which address and embody the uses of dialect. We envisage that such methods could be further applied in contexts such as reading groups, blog writing, criticism and institutional writing.

The network will gain from working with this three organisations because it will be able to test our the developing methods through the workshops in real time in the venues, feeding directly into the interests and challenges that suit organisations face in the use of dialect on an everyday level.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Title Dialecty series of artists' books 
Description As a parallel activity to the De-localising Dialect network, I was invited to commission and edit a series of six artists' books, co-published by Book Works (London) and The Common Guild (Glasgow). These are artists' books, drawn from a national open submission which are either written in dialect or which are discussing the critical dimensions of dialect. The artists' books are as follows: New Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border by Harry Josephine Giles & Martin O'Leary ISBN 978 1 906012 92 2 Skrubolz Garbillkore Robert Herbert McClean ISBN 978 1 906012 94 6 It Disappears In Blue and Red and Gold Helen Nisbet ISBN 978 1 906012 93 9 Thresholds: A Prosody of Citizenship Lisa Robertson ISBN 978 1 906012 97 7 Enn Gramaten Natasha Soobramanien & Luke Williams ISBN 978 1 906012 95 3 Notes on Just Back from Los Angeles: A Portrait of Yvonne Rainer Adam Pendleton ISBN 978 1 906012 96 0 
Type Of Art Artwork 
Year Produced 2018 
Impact These artists' books have directly created and facilitated a public conversation about the uses of dialect within contemporary art English - this is evidenced by my being invited to run workshops on the subject in institutions such as: Baltic (Newcastle), The Common Guild (Glasgow) and the Van Abbe (Eindhoven, The Netherlands). 
URL https://www.bookworks.org.uk/node/1954
 
Description These research has directly contributed to national debates about the use value of non-traditional forms of English within contemporary art and literature fora. One example of this is my being invited to speak on the subject at national and international institutions (please see previous entry in this form for details of these).
First Year Of Impact 2018
Sector Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections
Impact Types Cultural

 
Description Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art - network event two 
Organisation Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution We led our second network event at Baltic.
Collaborator Contribution Baltic hosted our second network event and provided sponsorship in kind.
Impact This collaboration was multidisciplinary: art criticism, art practice, English literature, sociolinguistics, museum studies
Start Year 2018
 
Description The Hunterian - network event one 
Organisation Hunterian Art Gallery
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution We led our first network event at The Hunterian.
Collaborator Contribution The Hunterian acted as host for our first network event, and provided support in kind.
Impact This collaboration is multidisciplinary: art criticism, museum studies, poetry, Scottish studies
Start Year 2019
 
Description The Swedenborg Institute - network event three 
Organisation The Swedenborg Society
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Learned Society 
PI Contribution We led our third network event at The Swedenborg Institute.
Collaborator Contribution The Swedenborg Institute hosted our network event and provided support in kind.
Impact This collaboration was multidisciplinary: archive studies, art practice, philosophy, poetry,
Start Year 2019