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[Lecture]What use is linguistics? - M.A.K. Halliday, 26 September

Last updated:2013-09-23

Topic: What use is linguistics?
Speaker: M.A.K. Halliday – Emeritus Professor, Sydney University
Time: 8:30 – 10:00 AM, September 26, Thursday
Venue:
Lecture Hall 315, School of Foreign Languages Building 

Brief Introduction about the Speaker

M.A.K. Halliday is a British-born Australian linguist who developed the internationally influential systemic functional linguistic model of language. His grammatical descriptions go by the name of systemic functional grammar (SFG). Halliday describes language as a semiotic system, "not in the sense of a system of signs, but a systemic resource for meaning". For Halliday, language is a "meaning potential"; by extension, he defines linguistics as the study of "how people exchange meanings by 'languaging'". Halliday describes himself as a generalist, meaning that he has tried "to look at language from every possible vantage point", and has described his work as "wander[ing] the highways and byways of language". However, he has claimed that "to the extent that I favoured any one angle, it was the social: language as the creature and creator of human society".

Introduction Source: Wiki