The General Linguistics research group at the Department of Language, Literature and Communication of the VU Faculty of Humanities is seeking to fill two PhD positions. The positions are part of the ERC-funded project ‘Papuans on the move. The linguistic prehistory of the West Papuan languages’, which is devoted to the documentation of putative West Papuan languages in Indonesia and the reconstruction of their history by means of comparative analysis. Both projects will be carried out in close collaboration with the project’s principal investigator, Antoinette Schapper, and will involve documentary fieldwork in collaboration with local Indonesian scholars and communities. The positions include ample funding for research and travel. Short descriptions of each of the projects are provided below. Candidates are strongly encouraged to read the project descriptions carefully when preparing their applications.
PhD project 1: The North Halmahera languages The Papuan languages of North Halmahera have been subject to significant descriptive work from the 19th century onward. Their linguistic relationship to one another is considered uncontroversial in the Papuan linguistic literature. However, there is still little known about the properties of their ancestral language, Proto-North Halmahera. Through an in-depth lexical and morphological reconstruction of Proto-North Halmahera, this project will seek to understand processes of diversification and change in the family. In particular, this project will look to disentangle strata of Austronesian grammatical and lexical influence at different points in the North Halmaheran family. Fieldwork for this project will involve documentation of the West Makian language, but much of the project will be concerned with comparative analysis of the extensive materials which already exist for many languages in the family.
PhD project 2: The West Bird’s Head languagesThis project will be concerned with the West Bird’s Head languages, a lexically divergent group with comparatively little documentation. This project will involve survey work on the whole West Bird’s Head group as well as in-depth fieldwork on one or two of the languages. Methodologically, the project will be engaged with issues surrounding lexical replacement and semantic shifts, and how these can drive language divergence and obscure linguistic relationships.
Your duties
- conduct research on the topic of the project, resulting in a PhD thesis and in journal publications
- conduct fieldwork on languages relevant to the project
- contribute data to the larger project’s research outputs
- participate in and contribute to the activities of the project, including conference/workshop organization