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Professor Felicity Meakins
Professor

Felicity Meakins

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 336 53114

Overview

Background

I am a Professor of Linguistics in the School of Languages and Cultures. I am also a Fellow in the Academy for Social Sciences Australia (ASSA), a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Humanities (AAH) and an Australian FulbrightSenior Scholar 2025-2026. I was also the Deputy Director of the UQ node of the ARC Centre of Excellence for the Dynamics of Language which finished in 2022.

Some of my research focuses on language evolution and contact processes across northern Australia where I have worked for the past two decades. In 2021, I won the Eureka Award for Interdisciplinary Scientific Research together with Cassandra Algy, Lindell Bromham and Xia Hua for this work. My new ARC DP Project 'Dingo Lingo' with Myf Turpin and Linda Barwick (U-Syd) is looking at canine words across northern Australia to understand their spread across the continent and their relationship with First Nations Peoples. My interests are also in the relationship between Indigenous Knowledges and Western Science. One place this exploration plays out is in my co-authored book 'Tamarra: A Story of Termites on Gurindji Country' (Hardie Grant, 2023) which won the 2024 Prime Minister's Literary Award for Children's Literature.

I have co-compiled four dictionaries (Gurindji, Bilinarra, Ngarinyman and Mudburra) and two grammars (Bilinarra and Gurindji) and two ethnobiologies (Bilinarra/Gurindji/Malngin and Jingulu/Mudburra). I am also the author of Case-Marking in Contact (Benjamins, 2011), co-author of Understanding Linguistic Fieldwork (Routledge, 2018) and Songs from the Stations (Sydney University Press, 2019) and co-editor of Loss and Renewal: Australian Languages since Colonisation (Mouton, 2016) and Yijarni: True Stories from Gurindji Country (2016, Aboriginal Studies Press). I have also authored over 55 papers on language contact and change in academic volumes and journals. In 2021, I also won the Linguistic Society of America (LSA)'s Kenneth L Hale Award for linguistic fieldwork.

I studied at the University of Queensland between 1995-2001. Between 2001-04, I worked as a community linguist at Diwurruwurru-jaru Aboriginal Corporation facilitating revitalisation programs for Bilinarra and Ngarinyman people. I joined the Aboriginal Child Language project (University of Melbourne) in 2004 as a PhD student. I completed my PhD in 2008 and continued documenting Gurindji, Bilinarra and Gurindji Kriol as a part of the Jaminjungan and Eastern Ngumpin DOBES project, then with my own ELDP grant at the University of Manchester and finally returned to UQ with an ARC APD, DECRA and Future Fellowship. I have also held an ARC DP with Rob Pensalifini which studied contact between Mudburra and Jingulu and Mudburra and Kriol.

Availability

Professor Felicity Meakins is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Fields of research

Qualifications

  • Bachelor (Honours) of Arts, The University of Queensland
  • Doctor of Philosophy, University of Melbourne

Research interests

  • Language documentation, including fieldwork methodology, annotation of corpus data and the structure of reference grammars

  • Sociolinguistics, e.g. language ecologies, endangerment and shift, variationalist approaches

  • Morphology, particularly morphology in contact

  • Australian languages, including Gurindji, Gurindji Kriol, Bilinarra, Ngarinyman and Kriol

  • Language contact, particularly mixed languages, creole languages, code-switching and language convergence

Research impacts

First Nations groups want to ensure that their languages, cultures and stories are there for future generations. Australia has the world’s longest continuous collection of cultures, and Indigenous languages are key for the future survival of these cultures in the aftermath of the devastating effects of colonialism. They are shaped by the minds of individual speakers. They encode the social dynamics of groups over time. They support and transmit cultural practices. These languages are vital for ensuring a brighter future for younger Indigenous people.

The aim of my work over the last two decades has been to build interdisciplinary teams of Indigenous community members, students, postdocs, scientists & artists to document highly endangered First Nations languages. This work extends beyond the traditional boundaries of linguistic research to ground projects in the artistic, cultural & land-based practices of First Nations peoples. We have been aiming to make lasting records of these languages and address broader research questions related to human language and cognition.

I have co-authored a number of general audience books with Gurindji co-authors: Kawarla: How to Make a Coolamon (Batchelor Press, 2014), Mayarni-kari Yurrk: More Stories from Gurindji Country (2016, Batchelor Press), Birrka Marnini: Making Things Mudburra (Batchelor Press, 2019), and Karu: Growing up Gurindji (Spinifex Press, 2019). We have also produced a 30 short films for ICTV and NITV, 8 posters of Gurindji sign language and ethnobiological topics. I have also done research for Brenda L Croft's exhibition Still in my mind: Gurindji Location, Experience and Visuality. All of this work has been undertaken in collaboration with Karungkarni Art and Culture Aboriginal Corporation and the Murnkurrumurnkurru rangers.

Works

Search Professor Felicity Meakins’s works on UQ eSpace

108 works between 1999 and 2024

101 - 108 of 108 works

2001

Other Outputs

Lashings of Tongue: A Relevance Theroetic Account of Impoliteness

Meakins, F. (2001). Lashings of Tongue: A Relevance Theroetic Account of Impoliteness. PhD Thesis, School of English, Media Studies and Art History, The University of Queensland.

Lashings of Tongue: A Relevance Theroetic Account of Impoliteness

2000

Journal Article

Reknowing the bicycle: Renewing its space

Meakins, Felicity (2000). Reknowing the bicycle: Renewing its space. M/C Reviews, 6, 1-1.

Reknowing the bicycle: Renewing its space

2000

Journal Article

Editorial: 'Chat'

Meakins, Felicity and Rintel, Sean (2000). Editorial: 'Chat'. M/C Journal, 3 (4)

Editorial: 'Chat'

2000

Journal Article

Review of The Lingo: Listening to Australian English by Graham Seal Sydney: UNSW Press

Meakins, Felicity (2000). Review of The Lingo: Listening to Australian English by Graham Seal Sydney: UNSW Press. Journal of Australian Studies, 24 (65), 216-217. doi: 10.1080/14443050009387605

Review of The Lingo: Listening to Australian English by Graham Seal Sydney: UNSW Press

1999

Journal Article

'End'

Ensor, Jason and Meakins, Felicity H. (1999). 'End'. M/C: A Journal of media & culture, 2 (8)

'End'

1999

Journal Article

De Mortuis Bonum: An internet eulogy tour

Meakins, Felicity (1999). De Mortuis Bonum: An internet eulogy tour. M - C: A Journal of Media and Culture, 2 (7)

De Mortuis Bonum: An internet eulogy tour

1999

Journal Article

The subject of Howard's desire: Passive sentences and political intention

Meakins, Felicity (1999). The subject of Howard's desire: Passive sentences and political intention. M / C: A Journal of Media and Culture, 2 (5), x-x.

The subject of Howard's desire: Passive sentences and political intention

1999

Journal Article

Shooting Baywatch: Resisting cultural invasion

Meakins, Felicity H. (1999). Shooting Baywatch: Resisting cultural invasion. M/C: A journal of media & culture, 2 (2).

Shooting Baywatch: Resisting cultural invasion

Funding

Current funding

  • 2025 - 2029
    Dingo Lingo: Australia's past through the lens of biology, language & music
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2023
    First Nations Digital Story-telling Project
    auDA Foundation Grants
    Open grant
  • 2021 - 2022
    Human consciousness of magnetoreception
    Foundational Questions Institute
    Open grant
  • 2018 - 2023
    Something old, something new: Indigenous languages since colonisation
    ARC Future Fellowships
    Open grant
  • 2015 - 2019
    Trilingual language contact in an Indigenous community
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2017
    Out of the Mouths of Babes: The Role of Indigenous Children in Language Change
    ARC Discovery Early Career Researcher Award
    Open grant
  • 2013 - 2014
    Agents of change: Children, Indigenous languages and English
    UQ Research Fellowship in the Humanities and Social Sciences
    Open grant
  • 2012 - 2013
    Gurindji and Bilinarra Dictionaries and Multimedia Databases
    Indigenous Languages Support
    Open grant
  • 2012 - 2013
    ResTeach Funding 2012 0.2 FTE School of LCCS
    UQ ResTeach
    Open grant
  • 2011
    ResTeach 2011 0.2 FTE School of Languages and Comparative Cultural Studies
    UQ ResTeach
    Open grant
  • 2010 - 2012
    A Grammar of Bilinarra, an Endangered North Australian Indigenous Language
    UQ New Staff Research Start-Up Fund
    Open grant
  • 2009 - 2013
    Life after death: Exploring the birth of Gurindji Kriol, a new Aboriginal mixed language
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Professor Felicity Meakins is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Situating Saibai Language and Cultural archival material within a Cultural Framework

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Associate Professor Morgan Brigg

  • Master Philosophy

    Reconstructing Gangulu for language revitalisation

    Principal Advisor

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Paradigm Shift: A Theoretical and Descriptive Study of Mudburra-Kriol Contact

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Associate Professor Rob Pensalfini

  • Doctor Philosophy

    The Agency of Gumbaynggirr Language as a living form of Indigenous Knowledge: Exploring the Relationships between Gumbaynggirr Community Members and Gumbaynggirr Language as a life positive force for the Well-Being of Language and Community.

    Principal Advisor

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Professor Felicity Meakins directly for media enquiries about:

  • Aboriginal languages
  • Language change

Need help?

For help with finding experts, story ideas and media enquiries, contact our Media team:

communications@uq.edu.au