Keira Gebbie Ballantyne

Sherri Manna, Keira Ballantyne & Angela KenradPh.D., University of Hawai'i at Mānoa, 2005
B.A. Hons, University of Western Australia, 1997

Curriculum Vitae
html pdf

Contact  Details

ballanty at hawaii dot edu

or

keiraballantyne at gmail dot com




Sherri Manna, Keira Ballantyne & Angela Kenrad in Colonia, Yap

Research Interests

I am broadly interested in the way that structural information within units larger than the sentence is communicated and comprehended. What are the cues and clues within a piece of running text that act as signposts to the unfolding structure of that text? How is a narrative produced and understood in such a way that the background scene-setting information is distinct from the high points of narrative? What sorts of syntactic and morphological resources are exploited to make that difference? How do we identify and track the various characters or objects within a piece of discourse? What makes some of them more central than others?

I am also interested in Austronesian languages, language endangerment and in field research methodology.

Yapese

Yapese is spoken on the islands of Yap, at the western edge of Micronesia. It is a member of the Oceanic subgroup of the Austronesian language family, but has no close relatives within Oceanic. It has also borrowed heavily from both Oceanic and non-Oceanic neighbours. Around six thousand people speak Yapese.

I first became interested in Yapese while taking an undergraduate field methods class in 1995 at the University of Western Australia. I completed my Honours dissertation, Reduplication in Yapese, in 1997, working with Ms. Josephine Giltug, a native speaker of Yapese. I have been a student in the doctoral program at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa since 1998. In the spring of 2001, I compiled a small corpus of written Yapese texts in Honolulu with the assistance of Ms. Stella Kolinski. In late 2002 I extended the corpus with a series of tape recorded texts collected on a field trip to Yap, working with Ms. Angela Y. Kenrad and Sherri Manna’.

Dissertation Research

My dissertation, Textual Structure and Discourse Prominence in Yapese Narrative, concerns the relationship between the foregrounded portion of a narrative text and the accessibility of referring expressions in discourse. The work describes the way in which the tense-mood-aspect system of Yapese works to create a complex foreground and background within narrative text, as well as the varying representation of entities in discourse dependent upon the degree of attention that they warrant.

Yapese Corpora

Yapese Corpora Page

The data for my dissertation  come from a  small two-part corpus of Yapese collected  between 2000 and 2002. You are welcome to use these data for your own research.

Research available online

Ballantyne, Keira Gebbie. 2005. Immersion In The Storyworld: Foregrounding and Backgrounding in Yapese Narrative. Tuesday Seminar, Department of Linguistics, University of Hawai'i at Mānoa. Abstract Powerpoint presentation

Ballantyne, Keira Gebbie. 2005. Pronouns, Tense-Mood-Aspect, and the Figure-Ground Cline in Yapese Narrative. Presented at The Linguistic Society of America Annual Meeting, San Francisco.

Ballantyne, Keira Gebbie. 2004. Givenness as a Ranking Criterion in Centering Theory: Evidence from Yapese. Oceanic Linguistics. 43(1): 49-72. (subscribers only)

Ballantyne, Keira Gebbie. 2003. Is Noun Incorporation a Discourse Variable in Yapese? Seamless Morphology as a Heuristic for Productivity. Presented at the Tenth Annual Meeting of the Austronesian Formal Linguistics Association, Hawaii, Mar 28-30. (abstract)

Ballantyne, Keira Gebbie. 2000. Reduplication in Yapese: A Case of Syllable Copying. In Carolyn Smallwood & Catherine Kitto (eds) The Proceedings of the Austronesian Formal Linguistics Association VI, Toronto Working Papers in Linguistics. (abstract)

Links of Interest

Yapese stories online (untranslated) from PREL (Pacific Resources for Education and Learning)

Ethnologue: Languages of the World

Peter Ladefoged’s IPA chart

Pacific News Bulletin

Academia Sinica Formosan Language Archive

UH Language Documentation Center

UH Linguistics

Border graphics from www.grsites.com
Last updated October 24th 2005