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“Sociolinguistic considerations of severe weather communication for Spanish-speaking communities” | Dr. Salvatore Callesano

Dr. Callesano joins us from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign as a Glasscock Short-Term Visiting Fellow.
Public lecture on 3/5 at 4pm in GLAS 311.

March 5

4:00 PM

GLAS 311

Photo: Della Perrone/University of Illinois College of Liberal Arts & Sciences

Dr. Salvatore Callesano
Assistant Professor of Linguistics in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Sociolinguistic considerations of severe weather communication for Spanish-speaking communities

Spanish speakers in the U.S. are disproportionately affected by weather threats. Severe weather communication is one context in which Spanish dialect variation and perception play key roles, as messages must be accessible and understandable across audiences. In this work, quantitative findings are presented from an interdisciplinary, national survey, specifically highlighting how Spanish dialect variation manifests in the context of weather communication and how dialect perception influences which media outlets listeners choose when obtaining weather alerts.

Faculty host: Dr. Sean McKinnon samckinnon@tamu.edu

The Glasscock Short-Term Visiting Fellowships program allows Texas A&M faculty to bring distinguished scholars, artists, and performers to campus for a period of five days, wherein the fellow will engage with faculty and students and deliver a public presentation.