Theses & Dissertations

Our CLASP students have produced a number of distinctive MA theses and PhD dissertations under the direction of CLASP faculty. At the Master鈥檚 level, an MA thesis may be substituted for one of the four CLASP courses to fulfill the program requirements. Below is an abbreviated list of CLASP dissertations and theses.

Note: If you are a current or former CLASP student, we would like to add a citation for your dissertation or thesis to this page! Please send your information to the CLASP Director, Kira Hall, at kira.hall@colorado.edu.

PhD Dissertations

  • Khoo, Velda (2024). "Modeling Singlish: Authentic Hybridity in a Model Nation". Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.
  • Parish, Ayden (2024). 鈥淗earing Voices as Atypical Social Agents鈥. Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.
  • Tarren Andrews (2021). "Colonization is not a metaphor: Tracing the logics of settler colonialism back to the Early Medieval North Atlantic." Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.
  • Marielle Butters (2021). "Negation in four languages of Indonesia." Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.
  • Astrid N. Sambol铆n Morales (2021). "Puerto Rican m(other)work at the center: Everyday agency and resistance as a foundation for more inclusive educational spaces." School of Education, University of Colorado.
  • Rich Sandoval (2016). 鈥淕esture-Speech Bimodalism in Arapaho Grammar: An Interactional Approach.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • Nicholas Williams (2016). 鈥淧lace reference and location formulation in Kula conversation.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • Hernandez, Jaclyn (2015). 鈥淧athways toward Proficiency: A case study of emerging bilingual students鈥 opportunities to learn academic language.鈥 School of Education, University of Colorado.

  • Hughes, Jessica (2015). 鈥淣othing about autistics without autistics: A critical, action implicative discourse analysis of neurodiversity advocacy online.鈥 Department of Communication, University of Colorado.

  • Sarris, Julia S. (2015). 鈥淩eturning to School: Changing Barriers and Baggage to Assets and Advantages.鈥 School of Education, University of Colorado.

  • Davis, Jennifer (2013). 鈥淟earning to 鈥楾alk Indian鈥: Ethnolinguistic Identity and Language Revitalization in the Chickasaw Renaissance.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • Raclaw, Joshua (2013). 鈥淚ndexing Inferables and Organizational Shifts: 鈥楴o鈥-prefaces in English Conversation.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • Stadlbauer, Susanne (2012). 鈥淒isplaced Islamic Identities: Language, Time, and Space in a Post 9/11 Islam.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • Zimman, Lal (2012). 鈥淰oices in Transition: Testosterone, Transmasculinity, and the Gendered Voice among Female-to-Male Transgender People.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • Lombas, Leith (2011). 鈥淚ndividualism in Action: An Investigation into the Lived Experiences of Peace Corps Volunteers.鈥 Department of Sociology, University of Colorado.

  • Heintzelman, Lori (2009). 鈥淭he Re-education of Desire: The Role of Narrative in Religious-Based Sexual Identity Transformation.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • Nilep, Chad (2009). 鈥淎rticulating a Transnational Family: 鈥楬ippo Family鈥 Language Learners in Japan and the USA.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • Weldeyesus, Weldu (2009). 鈥淟anguage Socialization and Ensuing Identity Construction among Ethiopian Immigrants in Metropolitan Denver.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • Hodges, Adam (2008). 鈥淭he 鈥榃ar on Terror鈥 Narrative: The (Inter)textual Construction and Contestation of Sociopolitical Reality.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • Merrill, John Bryce (2008). 鈥淢aking it, not Making it: Creating Music in Everyday Life.鈥 Department of Sociology, University of Colorado.

  • Christof Demont-Heinrich (2005). 鈥淚nsularity in the Global Linguistic Center? American 鈥楶restige Press鈥 Discourses on English and Globalization in a Post Cold War World.鈥 Department of Journalism, University of Colorado.

MA Theses

  • Jessee, Em. (2024). "The Cisgender Listening Subject in Sibiliant Perception." Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado. 

  • Stuart, Forest. (2024). "'I Think I鈥檓 Funniest When I鈥檓 my Most Autistic': Trans Autistic Absurdity in Intracommunity Humorous Interaction." Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado. 

  • Schlagenhauf, Alexis. (2023). "Digital Intimacy in ASMR Role-Play Videos." Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado. 

  • Rosenau, Sara. (2022). "Mock Koreaboo: Appropriating Appropriation." Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado. 

  • Thomas, Kahlil B. (2018). 鈥'The toughest one we can find': Thug personae and meaning across the boundary of ethnicity." Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado. 

  • Hirschey, Olivia. (2017).  Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • LaPointe, Alyssa R. (2015). 鈥淥n aspects of social interaction, a pair of autistic twins, and their humanness.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • Manietta, Joseph (Bazil) (2015). 鈥淭ranslational Masculinities: The distributive performativity of gender in Korean boy bands.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • Griffith, Keri. (2014). 鈥淗eteronormative Script and Social Injustice Narratives: Lesbian and Gay Argumentation Strategies in Civil Union Hearings.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • James, Solange Anduze (2014). 鈥淭rinidad English Creole: A Semiotic Marker of Caribbean Postmodern Identity.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • Wagner, Irina (2014). 鈥淟anguage Revitalization on the Web: Technologies and Ideologies among the Northern Arapaho.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • Faracini, Elizabeth (2013). 鈥淐aipira Dialect Stylization in Brazilian Telenovelas: A Sociocultural Investigation of Language Ideologies.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • Buchner, Alexander (2012). 鈥淟aboratory Stylization of 鈥楪ay Speech鈥: Exploring Experimental Methodologies as a Tool for Sociocultural Linguistic Analysis.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • Kolberg, Iris (2012). 鈥溾榃hat are you doing?鈥: How Improvisational Actors Use the Body in the Contextualization of the Imagined Material World.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • Mells, Brandon (2012). 鈥淢embership Categories through Action: An Analysis of the Contested Morality of a Checkpoint Stop.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

  • Balder, Sara (2005). 鈥淟anguage, Heterosexism, and Identity: Normative Chilean Discursive Practices.鈥 Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado.

CLASP Facts

CLASP graduate Sara Rosenau earned an Honorable Mention in the John J. Gumperz Graduate Student Essay Competition for the submission of her MA Thesis directed by Professor Kira Hall at the American Anthropological Association 2023 Annual Meeting. Sara's thesis investigates "Mock Koreaboo" as a language variety used online among K-Pop fans.