[Xmca-l] Re: FW: Fw: Michael Halliday, RIP

David Kellogg dkellogg60@gmail.com
Mon Apr 16 17:52:46 PDT 2018


Let me just underline this:

"(H)is enormous body of work in developing the theory of systemic
functional linguistics is the single most important C20th century
contribution to our understanding of language
systems."

Those are very fine words, and I subscribe to every one of them.

When I first traveled to Japan to meet Professor Halliday, I had read just
enough to know he was a giant, a Vygotsky-sized titan, among minds. I think
I was so anxious that he should not tower over me that I lectured him for a
full five or six minutes about something in his talk I had completely
misunderstood, barely letting him say a word.

He took an immediate dislike to me. But he was never a man of strong
dislikes, and when I met him again in China and in Australia, I was
relieved that he did not recognize me at all (or at least he politely
pretended not to). As soon as I got to know him as a teacher and not just a
tower to be knocked down, I realized that part of that dislike had been
that Halliday always lived proleptically, not in but for a world where
absolutely everyone was a peer and a colleague and a comrade.

Even though it is a semiotic world and not a material one, it remains a
world that is yet to be made, even in academic life; yea, even in
systemic-functional-linguistic academic life. Still, we can clearly make it
out on the horizon in his last book "Aspects of Language and Learning"
(Springer, 2016). I will gratefully and gladly walk in the long cool shadow
of modesty that it casts for the rest of my days.


.

David Kellogg
Sangmyung University

Recent Article in *Early Years*

The question of questions: Hasan’s critiques, Vygotsky’s crises, and the
child’s first interrogatives
<https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09575146.2018.1431874>

Free e-print available at:
https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/6EeWMigjFARavQjDJjcW/full


On Tue, Apr 17, 2018 at 1:55 AM, Gordon Wells <gordonucsc@gmail.com> wrote:

> I am very sorry to hear of Michael's death. He played a very important role
> as I embarked on the Bristol Study of Language Development back in the
> middle 60s. I first met Michael when I travelled to London to hear him
> talk. I knew no-one in the gathering but, by chance, I got chatting over a
> cup of coffee with a very friendly person who, to my subsequent surprise,
> was the guest speaker. Over the following years, while Michael was still in
> London I would make visits to learn from him about what and how to code the
> recordings we made of the young children using a wireless microphone that
> they wore all day. I owe a great deal to his advice.
>
> Many years later I met him again in Hong Kong where we decided to go for a
> long walk over the mountain. After the conference, we found ourselves
> staying in the same beach hotel and we had more talk. I also visited
> Michael and Ruqaiya in Australia at about the time he was writing his book
> about Nigel's (Neil's) language development.
>
> I think it would be fair to say that his enormous body of work in
> developing the theory of systemic functional linguistics is the single most
> important C20th century contribution to our understanding of language
> systems. He will be sorely missed by many friends and colleagues, but his
> work will live on.
>
> Gordon
>
>
> Gordon Wells
>
>
>
> On Mon, Apr 16, 2018 at 5:42 AM, Peter Smagorinsky <smago@uga.edu> wrote:
>
> > Dear colleagues,
> >
> >
> >
> > Michael Halliday, who founded the Department of Linguistics at the
> > University of Sydney in 1976, has passed away at Uniting Wesley Heights
> > Nursing Home in Manly – aged 93. While Professor of Linguistics at
> Sydney,
> > Michael built up the Department, developing an undergraduate pass and
> > honours program and the first Master of Applied Linguistics program in
> the
> > Southern Hemisphere; and he played a key role in attracting an energetic
> > cohort of PhD students. He retired in 1987, becoming Emeritus Professor
> of
> > the University of Sydney. He had previously held chairs at the University
> > of London, the University of Illinois at Chicago Circle, and the
> University
> > of Essex.
> >
> >
> >
> > Born in Yorkshire in 1925, Michael's undergraduate and postgraduate
> > studies, which he pursued in Beijing, Guangzhou, Cambridge and London,
> > focused on Chinese. He later concentrated on English (cohesion,
> > lexicogrammar and prosodic phonology in particular), and is
> internationally
> > acclaimed as the founder of the theory of language known as Systemic
> > Functional Linguistics (SFL). The fourth edition of his most cited
> > publication, An Introduction to Functional Grammar (first published in
> > 1985) was published in 2014. Unlike many of his peers he conceived of
> > linguistics as an ideologically committed form of social action, and
> > devoted his career to the development of an appliable linguistics that
> > could be used to productively address secular concerns; his interest in
> > education and the critical role played by language in teaching and
> learning
> > is well-known. As Ron Carter comments on the collection of interviews
> with
> > Halliday edited by J.R. Martin (Bloomsbury 2013):
> >
> >
> >
> > “The phrases “major figure”, “significance” and “international influence”
> > are commonly overblown in the contemporary academic world; but these
> > interviews with Michael Halliday require no exaggeration. They represent
> > the richest of testimonies to his centrality, significance, impact and
> > enduring influence as a linguist.”
> >
> >
> >
> > Those who had the good fortune to know Michael as a teacher, mentor,
> > colleague, comrade and/or friend will remember him as a warm and humble
> yet
> > inspirational figure who made time for those around him, regardless of
> > their status. He suffered terribly from the loss of his beloved wife,
> > colleague and companion Ruqaiya Hasan in 2015, but was comforted in his
> > final years by frequent visits from family and colleagues from around the
> > globe, and the loving care of his son Neil and his partner Shaye.
> >
> >
> >
> > The Department honoured Michael with the founding of the Halliday Medal
> > upon his retirement, awarded annually to the leading students in its
> > applied linguistics program. As recently as 2014, Halliday presented the
> > award personally at the School of Literature, Art and Media’s
> prize-giving
> > ceremony. His work continues to influence teaching and research in the
> > Department and around the world – an enduring touchstone for everyone
> > interested in language and the ways in which people make meaning to live.
> >
> >
> >
> > The Department extends it sympathy to Michael's surviving family. His
> life
> > has passed but the amazing treasure of his intellect will thrive in all
> > those touched by his work for generations to come.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > A/Prof Monika Bednarek
> >
> > Chair of Linguistics
> >
> > John Woolley Building A20
> >
> > The University of Sydney
> >
> > NSW 2006
> >
> > Australia
> >
> >
> >
> >
>


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