


Joseph Errington (2007-2009) Joel Kuipers (2005-2007) Leanne Hinton (2003-2005) Elinor Ochs (2001-2003) Susan Gal (1999-2001) Alessandro Duranti (1997-1999) Harriet Klein (1995-1997) Jane Hill (1993-1995) Richard Bauman (1991-1993) Judith Irvine (1989-1991) Paul Kay (1987-1989) Michael Silverstein (1985-1987) Marianne Mithun (1983-1985) Secretary-Treasurer Angela Reyes (2006-2012) Members at Large Paul Garrett (2010-2012) Jillian Cavanaugh (2009-2011) Appointed Positions Anthropology Newsletter Column Editors Mark Peterson James Stanlaw Journal of Linguistic Anthropology Editor Alexandra Jaffe (Editor-in-Chief) Paul Garrett (Associate Editor) Digital Content Editor Leila Monaghan SLA “Web Guru” Alex Enkerli Nominations Committee (2010-2011) Paja Faudree Chaise LaDousa Barbra A. Officers Elected Executive Committee Positions President Kathryn Woolard (2009-2011) President-Elect Norma Mendoza-Denton (2010-2011) Past Presidents J.If you’d like to contact the SLA, please use our contact form. See here for a list of officers and the by-laws of the SLA. In addition to this website and blog, we also maintain several e-mail lists, organize academic meetings and award prizes for outstanding work in the discipline. Membership entitles you to a complementary subscription to the Journal of Linguistic Anthropology. To join the SLA, pelase register via the AAA website. The Society for Linguistic Anthropology (SLA) is a section of the American Anthropological Association (AAA). If you are interested in studying linguistic anthropology, be sure to visit our directory of linguistic anthropology programs. It explores the many ways in which practices of language use shape patterns of communication, formulate categories of social identity and group membership, organize large-scale cultural beliefs and ideologies, and, in conjunction with other semiotic practices, equip people with common cultural representations of their natural and social worlds. About About the Society for Linguistic Anthropology (SLA) Linguistic Anthropology is the comparative study of the ways in which language shapes social life.
