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Birgit Anette Rasmussen (Olsen)

Phil.Dr.

  • Emil Holms Kanal 2, 2300 København S, 22 Bygning 22 (Afsnit 1), 22-5-10

  • Emil Holms Kanal 2

    2300 København S

Personal profile

Current research

Following the Velux project Individual, kin and family in prehistoric Europe - what words can tell (2013-16), my primary research field at present is the interface between language and culture where I am particularly occupied with the Indo-European social structure as reflected in the vocabulary.

I am also working on a monograph on Indo-European word formation, and contiously I write articles on Indo-European linguistics, most lately on Greek and Latin historical morphology and on Armenian phonology.

Primary fields of research

While I take a broad interest in Indo-European language and culture in general, the following areas are particularly important in my previous and current research:

  • Indo-European morphology, especially nominal word formation
  • Indo-European morphophonemics and phonemics, especially the laryngeal theory and consonantal alternations
  • Indo-European lexicon and palaeolinguistics, e.g. with respect to kinship terms and social institutions
  • Classical Armenian phonology, morphology and etymology

Teaching

Through the years I have taught a variety of subjects within Indo-European studies:

  • Historical linguistics
  • Introduction to Indo-European studies
  • Introduction to linguistics - historical part
  • Indo-European and the Indo-Europeans
  • Indo-European phonology
  • Indo-European morphology
  • Indo-European word formation
  • Indo-European vocabulary
  • Laryngeal theory
  • Seminars on recent literature
  • Roots of Europe
  • Indo-Iranian, Sanskrit, Vedic, Avestan and Old Persian
  • Greek
  • Latin and Italic
  • Gothic and panorama of ancient Germanic languages
  • Old Irish
  • Armenian
  • Anatolian

Additionally, I have taught propaedeutic Greek and Latin and ancient literature.

Most recent courses:

Supervision

I am happy to supervise all subjects within Indo-European language and culture: phonology, morphophonemics, morphology, lexicon and archaeolinguistics. Moreover, subjects dealing with specific branches, with particular pleasure within Armenian, Indo-Iranian, Greek and Italic.

CV

Education

  • 1999: DPhil, UCPH
  • 1977: MA, Indo-European Linguistics, UCPH
  • 1974: BA, Indo-European Comparative Linguistics, UCPH

Employment

  • 2019-: Professor of Indo-European Studies, UCPH
  • 2014-19: Professor of Indo-European Studies with special responsibilities, UCPH
  • 2008–14: Associate professor of Indo-European at the centre of excellence Roots of Europe – Language, Culture and Migrations, U.C.
  • 2005-07: Associate research professor (Danish Council for Independent Research, Humanities), UCPH
  • 2001–03: Associate research professor (Danish Research Council for the Humanities), UCPH
  • 1991–92: Alexander-von-Humboldt-scholarship, Christian-Albrechts-Universität, Kiel
  • 1987-90: Research scholarship (Danish Research Council for the Humanities), UCPH

Administrative experience 

  • 2013: Centre leader of Roots of Europe; deputy (and for longer periods de facto) centre leader since 2010
  • 2013-: Leader of the Velux project Individual, kin and family in prehistoric Europe – what words can tell since July 2013
  • 2010-: Coordinator of Indo-European Studies, UCPH
  • Since the beginning of the Roots of Europe project 2008, I have had a key role in research
  • management, contact to international collaborators, organization of conferences, seminars, guest lectures etc.

Studies abroad

  • 1981–82: Studies of Vedic, Latin, Armenian, Hittite and Lycian: University of Regensburg
  • 1981: Studies of Classical and Modern Armenian: Armenian Academy of Sciences, Erevan
  • 1973-80: Summer courses in Modern Greek, Russian and Italian language and culture

University teaching

1977-2013       UCPH., Department of Linguistics (later INSS) (teaching assistant, external lecturer and research associate professor), teaching a wide range of subjects at all levels within the field of Indo-European studies

Supervision

Supervisor of theses at the levels of BA, MA (Latin, Greek, Italic, Celtic, morphology, semantics etc.) and Ph.D. (Jan Heegaard on Kalasha, Adam Hyllested on Indo-Uralic, Bjarne S. Hansen on Germanic/Nordic, Tobias Mosbæk Søborg on Anatolian); paedagogical supervisor of postdocs/ assistant professors (Jenny Larsson, Thomas Olander, Benedicte Nielsen Whitehead, Guus Kroonen).

Supervisor of six Marie Curie-postdocs since 2016: Matilde Serangeli, Laura Massetti, Stefan Höfler, Riccardo Ginevra, Corinna Scheungraber and Julia Sturm.

Membership of evaluation committees

Head of evaluation committees for Dr.Phil. thesis (Copenhagen), positions as Ph.D.-students and postdocs (Copenhagen) and prize theses (Copenhagen).

Member of evaluation committees for professorships (Stockholm and UCLA), Ph.D.-theses (Copenhagen, Stockholm, Leiden, Vienna and Prague), prize theses (Indogermanische Gesellschaft), Ph.D.-position (Vienna) and Academy Project (Jena).

 

Research

Author of three monographs and several articles on Indo-European matters. My fields of research embrace the Indo-European language family as a whole, including all individual branches, with special emphasis on morphology, notably nominal word formation, but also phonology and accentology, the morphophonemics of the proto-language, morphosyntax, loanword relations, etymology, “Wörter und Sachen”, and the reconstruction of Indo-European culture. Special studies are dedicated to Indo-Iranian, Greek, Latin, Germanic, Anatolian and in particular Armenian.

Editorial posts

  • Executive editor of Tocharian and Indo-European Studies (Museum Tusculanum Press), 2013-
  • Member of the editorial board of Nowele (Benjamins), 2013-
  • Member of the editorial board of Brill Studies in Indo-European, 2023-
  • Editor and co-editor of 6 collected volumes and conference proceedings (3 in progress)

Conference papers etc.

Contributions to about 30 conferences in Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, Switzerland, France, Poland, the Czech Republic, Great Britain, Armenia and the USA (several as invited speaker and all on different subjects).Guest lecturer at the Indo-European Summer School, Freie Universität, Berlin, 2009.

National and international network

Collaboration with the Centre for Textile Research, U.C., on teaching, and supervision of potential Marie Curie scholars.

Collaboration on scholarly exchange, seminars and publications with a wide range of European and American Indo-Europeanists, archaeologists and specialists on comparative mythology in connection with both the Roots of Europe and the Velux project. External collaborators on the Velux project are: Prof. Joshua Katz, Princeton (Classics and Indo-European, especially studies in vocabulary), Prof. Michael Janda, Münster (Indo-European language and mythology) and Kristian Kristiansen, Göteborg (archaeology, the Indo-European background of Bronze Age society, especially in Northern Europe). Moreover, the established contact with the archaeologists James Mallory, Belfast (Indo-European language and culture; the origin of the Tocharians) and David Anthony, Hartwell College (the archaeology of the Eurasian steppes) is continued, and a joint publication on archeology and language seen in the perspective of the Indo-European homeland is under preparation.

Outreach

Several popular lectures on language history, language and culture and Indo-European linguistics for e.g. the Open University, Filologisk Historisk Samfund, students and teachers of Latin and Greek, UCPH, trade unions etc.

Keywords

  • Faculty of Humanities
  • Indo-European linguistics
  • morphology
  • phonology
  • morphophonology
  • word formation
  • palaeolinguistics
  • Indo-European culture
  • Armenian
  • laryngeal theory
  • Italic
  • Indo-European society

Collaborations and top research areas from the last five years

Recent external collaboration on country/territory level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots or