Jessica Coon is a professor of linguistics at McGill University and Canada Research Chair in syntax and indigenous languages.[1] She was the linguistics expert consultant for the 2016 film Arrival.[2][3]
Jessica Coon | |
---|---|
Alma mater | |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Syntax, indigenous languages |
Thesis | Complementation in Chol (Mayan): A Theory of Split Ergativity (2010) |
Doctoral advisor | David Pesetsky |
Website | jessica |
Coon works on ergativity, split ergativity, case and agreement, nominalization, field methodology, and collaborative language work in Ch'ol and Chuj (Mayan) and Mi'gmaq (Algonquian).[4]
Coon received her PhD from MIT in 2010 with a dissertation on aspect-based split ergativity, with a focus on the Ch'ol (Mayan) language, and cross-linguistic extensions.[5]
Coon received her BA in linguistics-anthropology from Reed College in May 2004.[6]
Coon teaches linguistics to both graduate and undergraduate students at McGill University.[7]
In 2011, she began collaborating with language teachers in the Mi’gmaq Listuguj community, in order to document, research, and develop teaching materials for Mi’gmaq, a First Nations language of Quebec.[8]
Coon was consulted during the finalization of the script for Denis Villeneuve's Arrival for her linguistics expertise.[9] She wrote a piece for the Museum of the Moving Image on fieldwork and alien grammars, following her work on Arrival.[10]
Since 2018, Coon has led a National Geographic project "to record, transcribe, and translate narratives across different dialects of Ch'ol."[11]