Keren Rice


Keren D. Rice is a Canadian linguist. She is a professor of linguistics and serves as the director of the Centre for Aboriginal Initiatives at the University of Toronto.

Education and career

Rice earned her PhD in 1976 from the University of Toronto, with a dissertation entitled, "Hare phonology."
She has published numerous works in both theoretical and Native American linguistics, in particular on Athabaskan languages. She specializes in research on Slavey, an indigenous language spoken in Canada's Northwest Territories, and has long been involved in maintaining and revitalizing the language. She has made contributions to the study of phonological markedness and to the interaction of phonology, morphology and semantics.

Awards and distinctions

Publications

Rice, K. 1977. Hare Noun Dictionary. Ottawa: Northern Social Research Division, Department of Indian and Northern Affairs.
E. Cook and K. Rice 1989. Athapaskan Linguistics: Current Perspectives on a Language Family. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
Rice, K. 1989. A Grammar of Slave. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
Rice, K. 1992. "On deriving sonority: a structural account of sonority relationships." Phonology 9: 61—99.
Rice, K. 1993. "A reexamination of the feature : the status of 'sonorant obstruents'." Language 69: 308–344.
Rice, K. 1996. Default variability: The coronal-velar relationship. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 14, 493–543. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00133597
Rice, K. 2000. Morpheme Order and Semantic Scope: Word Formation in the Athapaskan Verb. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Rice, K. 2006. Ethical Issues In Linguistic Fieldwork: An Overview. Journal of Academic Ethics 4, 123–155. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10805-006-9016-2
Rice, K. 2007. Markedness in phonology. In P. Lacy, The Cambridge Handbook of Phonology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Rice, K. & L. Saxon. 2008. Comparative Athapaskan Syntax: Arguments and Projections. In: The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Syntax, Edited by Guglielmo Cinque and Richard S. Kayne.