

Jamin Pelkey, PhD is a cognitive linguist. Pelkey received his PhD in linguistics from La Trobe University in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia in 2009. He is Full Professor and Program Director in the Department of Languages, Literatures & Cultures and a core faculty member of the TMU-York Joint Graduate Program in Communication & Culture, at Toronto Metropolitan University in Ontario, Canada. His research explores questions of language and meaning, using mixed methods to discover how patterns of bodily experience relate to the evolution of human consciousness — from extreme ideologies to the creative imagination. He draws on insights from linguistics, poetics, anthropology, psychology, and philosophy to interpret evidence from symbolic systems around the world in attempts to better understand cross-cultural paradoxes and reversals related to belief, inquiry, aesthetic experience and the meaning of life.
His first two monographs, Dialectology as Dialectic (De Gruyter, 2011) and A Phula Comparative Lexicon (SIL-LCDD, 2011), define the Phula ethnolinguistic groups of China and Vietnam, identifying 18 new languages through mixed-methods fieldwork and analysis. His latest publications are focused on language evolution and embodied cognition, including his third authored book, The Semiotics of X (Bloomsbury, 2017). He has published 15 edited or co-edited collections in semiotics, anthropology, and linguistics, including Sociohistorical Linguistics in Southeast Asia (Brill, 2017), Tropological Thought and Action (Berghahn, 2022), and the four-volume major reference work Bloomsbury Semiotics (Bloomsbury, 2023). Among other projects, he is currently collaborating on the 3rd Edition of the Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics (Elsevier, forthcoming) as Section Editor for Meaning.
Dr. Pelkey serves as President of the International Cognitive Linguistics Association (ICLA), President of the International Association for Cognitive Semiotics (IACS), and Co-Editor-in-Chief of Semiotica, journal of the IASS-AIS. He is an award-winning teacher and researcher with four federal grants (SSHRC and Mitacs), two Dean’s Awards (for teaching and research), the Mouton d’Or Award for best article in Semiotica (2017), and the TMU Early Research Career Excellence Award (2018