Jessica Coon


Jessica Coon is an associate professor of linguistics at McGill University and Canada Research Chair in syntax and indigenous languages. She was the linguistics expert consultant for the 2016 film Arrival.
Coon works on ergativity, split-ergativity, case and agreement, nominalization, field methodology, and collaborative language work in Ch'ol and Chuj and Mi'gmaq.

Early life and education

Coon received her PhD from MIT in 2010 with a dissertation on ergativity in the Ch'ol language.
Coon received her BA in linguistics-anthropology from Reed College in May 2004.

Career

Coon teaches linguistics to both graduate and undergraduate students at McGill University.
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.
Coon was consulted during the finalization of the script for Denis Villeneuve's Arrival for her linguistics expertise. She wrote a piece for the Museum of the Moving Image on fieldwork and alien grammars, following her work on Arrival.
Since 2018, Coon has led a National Geographic project "to record, transcribe, and translate narratives across different dialects of Ch’ol."

Key publications