Devyani Sharma

Devyani Sharma is a sociolinguistics professor and chair of the Linguistics department at Queen Mary University of London.[1] Her research interests include language variation and change, syntactic variation and style. Sharma's work particularly focusses on these topics within World Englishes and British Asian communities. She has written widely on these topics for various publications and has recently served as an associate editor for the Journal of Sociolinguistics.

Professor Devyani Sharma

Sharma holds a PhD and MA in linguistics from Stanford University and a BA in anthropology/ linguistics and fine art from Dartmouth College.

In recent years Sharma has completed an Economic and Social Research Council funded project on 'Dialect Style and Development in a Diasporic Community'[2] with Professor Ben Rampton and Dr Roxy Harris, both at King's College London.

Sharma has published extensively on British Asian English in addition to a widely used volume on Research Methods with Rob Podesva.

Sharma is the daughter of former Commonwealth Secretary-General Kamalesh Sharma.

Works

  • (ed. with Hundt) 'English in the Indian Diaspora'. Amsterdam: Benjamins. 2014.
  • (ed. with Podesva) 'Research Methods in Linguistics'. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 2013.
  • (ed. with Benor, Rose, Sweetland & Zhang) 'Gendered Practices in Language'. Stanford: CSLI. 2002.
gollark: What if you get swapped somehow such that you don't know which is which?
gollark: Or, well, consistent and verifiable.
gollark: I don't mean any instance of your mind is going to magically synchronize data with other ones (no), but that nobody seems to have a consistent idea of what consciousness is.
gollark: You can't actually know that.
gollark: Which is apiaristically impossible to measure right now.

References

  1. "Devyani Sharma, Linguistics". Queen Mary University of London. Retrieved 23 May 2016.
  2. "Research Council UK". Gateway to Research. Retrieved 6 Feb 2017.


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