Elisabeth Leinfellner studied linguistics at the University of Vienna and University of Munich and worked as a freelance "copy editor." She moved to Lincoln, Nebraska and taught at Doane College in Crete, Nebraska and at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. in 1975, she cofounded the International Wittgenstein Symposium of the Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society. In 1986, she returned to Austria and 1990 she obtained habilitation qualification at the Institute of Linguistics of the University of Vienna with a thesis on semantic networks and context. From 1994-1997 she served as president of ALWS and was vice president from 1997 to 2010. She was on the editorial committee of the new publication series of the ALWS and the reports of the ALWS. She had visiting professorships at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln in 1992, at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and the University of Rome IIin 1999. Starting in 1996, she organized for the Indiana University of Pennsylvania - Honors College with the University of Vienna and sponsored students. In 1999, she became a member of program committee for the Summer School at the Institute Vienna Circle of the University of Vienna.
Personal
In 1960, she married Werner Leinfellner and they had one daughter Ruth. She died in a Vienna hospital on January 4, 2010 and her husband Werner followed her in death three months later on April 6, 2010.
Scientific and philosophical work
Although she was trained as a linguist, she had deep interests in philosophical questions. Her research interests were both broad and deep including political language, philosophy of language, semantic networks and cognitive semantics, political and feminist critique of language, rhetoric and argumentation theory, the application of linguistics to the language of literature, and evolutionary mechanisms of the language development. In particular, she focused on Ludwig Wittgenstein and the philosopher and writer Fritz Mauthner. However, she also published on causality and language, on Habermas’ theory of communicative competence from a linguistic point of view and on William Ockham’s and Franz Brentano’s work on semantics. Her book on euphemism in political language is particular important. She also drew attention to texts and their meanings as evolutionary systems. Her research was intertwined with Werner Leinfellner’s and, therefore, it should not come as a surprise that they co-authored publications, most notably a book on ontology, systems theory and semantics. This comprehensive book is an original attempt to connect the traditional philosophical field of ontology with a cognitive-recursive semantics. It reflects their broad knowledge in different academic areas as well as their abilities to synthesize ideas. Their book bridges the gap between ordinary language and the language of theories. It demonstrates that both are governed by the same semantic regularities.
Selected publications
Elisabeth Leinfellner. Der Euphemismus in der politischen Sprache.. Duncker & Humblot, pp. 177.
Werner and Elisabeth Leinfellner. Ontologie, Systemtheorie und Semantik. Berlin: Duncker and Humblot.
Elisabeth Leinfellner. Semantische Netze und Textzusammenhang.. Peter Lang GmbH, pp. 549.
Elisabeth Leinfellner and Hubert Schleichert : Fritz Mauthner. Das Werk eines kritischen Denkers. Böhlau, Wien u. a. 1995,.
Elisabeth Leinfellner: Brückenschlag zwischen den Disziplinen. Fritz Mauthner als Schriftsteller, Kritiker und Kulturtheoretiker. Arco-Verlag, Wuppertal 2004,.
Publications in honor of Elisabeth Leinfellner
Sascha Windholz and Walter Feigl . Wissenschaftstheorie, Sprachkritik und Wittgenstein: In memoriam Elisabeth und Werner Leinfellner. Germany: ontos verlag, pp. 273.