![]() ![]() A Gathering of Statesmen: Records of the Choctaw Council Meetings 1826-1828 by Peter Perkins Pitchlynn. A Listening Wind: Native Literature from the Southeast. Haag retired from a long and bountiful career at the University of Oklahoma in the summer of 2021.Ģ016. ![]() Haag also was the Chair of the Steering Committee for the Master of Arts in the Teaching of English as a Second Language program, which was inaugurated in 2015.ĭr. In 2016, she published an edited volume on Southeast Native literature.Īt OU, she teaches, besides General Linguistics and the research course Senior Essay, Syntax, Semantics, Morphology, Field Methods, and occasional Topics courses.ĭr. She has become engaged in the problems of literary translation of indigenous languages as well. She has written, with her long-time collaborator Henry Willis, two Choctaw textbooks, as well as a translation of the 1826-1828 secretarial notes of Peter Pitchlynn. ![]() Her theoretical work is concerned with lexical roots, comparative word formation, and arbitrary categories. Recently, she has begun work on the Osage language. Her primary research languages are Choctaw and Cherokee. Her research interests are centered on Native American languages, and she has engaged in theoretical work, language preservation, and literature. (405) Haag earned her PhD at the State University of New York, Stony Brook in 1996 and became an Assistant Professor of Linguistics at the University of Oklahoma in 2000. ![]()
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