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Geoffrey
Nunberg -- Bio
Geoffrey Nunberg (BA, Columbia; MA, Penn; PhD, CUNY) is an adjunct full professor at the School of Information at the University of California at Berkeley. Until 2001, he was a principal scientist at the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, working on the development of linguistic technologies. He has also taught at UCLA, the University of Rome, and the University of Naples. Nunberg has written scholarly books and articles on a range of topics, including semantics and pragmatics, information access, written language structure, multilingualism and language policy, and the cultural implications of digital technologies. Nunberg is the emeritus chair of the usage panel of the American Heritage Dictionary and has written on language and other topics for The Atlantic, The American Prospect, Forbes ASAP, American Lawyer, and Fortune, and for the Los Angeles Times, the Washington Post, the San Jose Mercury News, the San Francisco Chronicle, Newsday and the Week in Review section of the Sunday New York Times. He also does a regular language commentary on the NPR program "Fresh Air" and has contributed "letters from America" to the BBC4. He has been the subject of features and interviews in Fortune, the Harvard Business Review, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Boston Globe, and Stanford Magazine. He is a contributor to the blog LanguageLog. Nunberg's books about language
include The Way
We Talk Now (2001), and the 2004 collection Going
Nucular (PublicAffairs), which was named one of the ten best
nonfiction books of 2004 by Amazon.com and one of the ten best books of
the year by the San Jose Mercury News, and was listed among the
year's best language books by the Boston Globe, the Hartford
Courant, and the Chicago Tribune. His 2006 book Talking
Right: How Conservatives Turned Liberalism into a Tax-Raising,
Latte-Drinking, Sushi-Eating, Volvo-Driving, New York Times-Reading,
Body-Piercing, Hollywood-Loving, Left-Wing Freak Show (PublicAffairs,
2006) was named one of the ten best books of the year by the Washington
Monthly. His most recent book is The
Years of Talking Dangerously (PublicAffairs 2009). For his
general writing about language, Nunberg was awarded the Linguistic Society of America's Language and the Public
Interest Award in 2001. Nunberg has been a expert witness in a number of legal cases involving trademarks and other linguistic matters. He was the expert for the group of American Indians who petitioned the Trademark Commission to cancel the mark of the Washington Redskins. He also served as the expert in the American Library Association's legal challenge of the Children's Internet Protection Act, which mandates the use of Internet filtering software in all libraries that receive the e-rate subsidy.
Nunberg's publications on language policy and other language topics include "L'Amérique par la Langue" (Cahiers de Médiologie, 1997); "Lingo Jingo" (The American Prospect, July, 1997); and "The Persistence of English" (introduction to the sixth edition of the Norton Anthology of English Literature). Nunberg's
publications on technology include "The Places of Books in the Age of
Electronic Reproduction" (Representations, 1993), "Will
Libraries Survive?" (The American Prospect, November, 1998);
"Les enjeux linguistiques d'Internet" (Critique Internationale,
1999), "Will the Internet Speak English?" (The American Prospect,
2000), "The Internet Filter Farce" (The American Prospect,
January 1-15, 2001) and the edited collection The Future of the Book
(University of California Press, 1996). He is currently working on
a book about language and civility in public life.
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Copyright © 2002 Geoffrey Nunberg All rights reserved. |