Julia S. Falk (born 1941) is a professor emeritus at the Linguistics Department, Michigan State University.
[1] She earned her PhD in linguistics from the University of Washington in 1968 with a dissertation entitled "Nominalizations in Spanish.
[4] Her work has played an important role in drawing attention to the role of women linguists in the first half of the twentieth century through her book, Women, Language and Linguistics, as well as in Falk (1994, 1995).
[5] A member of North American Association for the History of the Language Sciences (NAAHoLS), she served as president in the year 2000.
Otto Jespersen, Leonard Bloomfield, and American structural linguistics.
Roman Jakobson and the history of Saussurean concepts in North American linguistics.
Words without grammar: Linguists and the international auxiliary language movement in the United States.
'Language as a living, cultural phenomenon' -- Gladys Amanda Reichard and the study of native American languages.
Turn to the history of linguistics: Noam Chomsky and Charles Hockett in the 1960s.
‘Portraits of women linguists: Louise Pound, Edith Claflin, Adelaide Hahn’.
Women, Language and Linguistics: Three American Stories from the First Half of the Twentieth Century [Alice Vanderbilt Morris, Gladys Amanda Reichard, E. Adelaide Hahn].