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Walther Alexander Glodstaf

Profile picture for Walther Alexander Glodstaf

Contact Information

4107 Literatures, Cultures & Linguistics Building
707 S. Mathews Ave. | MC-168
Urbana, IL 61801

Office Hours

Fall 2021: Mon 1pm - 2pm (FLB4107)
PhD Candidate
Graduate Teaching Assistant LING301/ LAS291/292
PREDOC FELLOW

Biography

I am Walther Glödstaf and I am pursuing the minor in EU studies while doing a PhD in Linguistics at UIUC. I came to UIUC after my undergrad in English Literature and Linguistics at the University of Glasgow, and after my masters in Linguistics at Utrecht University. I am originally from Finland but grew up mainly in Stockholm.
My thesis is focuses on understanding the root causes of L1 attrition via psycholinguistic methodologies (primarily priming), to see if L1 attrition can be conceived of as a change in activation.
My work with the EU Center looks at how a deeper linguistic understanding of minority languages and their situation can inform policy, and how current policy in this area (which often is not informed by this as much) affects the EU’s Normative and Market Power.
I for instance compared the legal rights and current protection of autochtone minority languages that differ in whether they are spoken on the continent of Europe, or in the EU’s Overseas Countries and Territories (OCTs); and how this affects the EU’s Normative Power.
As an extension of this project, I currently work on investigating what effect language policy as a predictive variable has on the GDP of EU countries, and thus, by extension the effect of language policy on EU’s Market Power.

Research Interests

Syntax, Heritage Languages, Language Attrition, Bilingualism, Language Policy

Research Description

I am interested in L1 attrition and psycholinguistic representations of language, as well as the intersection of language and policy, particularly as far as minority language protections are concerned. My thesis is focuses on understanding the root causes of L1 attrition via psycholinguistic methodologies (primarily priming), to see if L1 attrition can be conceived of as a change in activation.


My work with the EU Center looks at how a deeper linguistic understanding of minority languages and their situation can inform policy, and how current policy in this area (which often is not informed by this as much) affects the EU’s Normative and Market Power.
I for instance compared the legal rights and current protection of autochtone minority languages that differ in whether they are spoken on the continent of Europe, or in the EU’s Overseas Countries and Territories (OCTs); and how this affects the EU’s Normative Power.
As an extension of this project, I currently work on investigating what effect language policy as a predictive variable has on the GDP of EU countries, and thus, by extension the effect of language policy on EU’s Market Power.

Education

University of Glasgow (hon MA)
Utrecht Universiteit (RMA)