Course Info: CSI-0114

CourseCSI-0114 Intro Linguistic Anthropology
Long TitleLanguage and Discrimination: Introduction to Linguistic Anthropology
Term2019S
Note(s) Satisfies Distribution
Textbook information
Meeting InfoFranklin Patterson Hall 104 on T,TH from 9:00-10:20
FacultyAshley Smith
Capacity23
Available5
Waitlist0
Distribution(s) Power, Community and Social Justice
Cumulative Skill(s)Multiple Cultural Perspectives
Writing and Research
Additional InfoStudents are expected to spend 6-8 hours weekly on work and preparation outside of class time.
Description

How do perceptions about language affect how people create, recognize, and negotiate social difference? In other words, how are perceptions about language linked to ideas about class, race, ethnicity, and gender? In this course, we will consider how language is used to discriminate while developing a basic understanding of the anthropological study of language, including some of the key ideas, methods, and findings in this field. This course aims to demonstrate how concepts used by linguistic anthropologists are broadly applicable. By the end of the course, students will have a working understanding of the role language plays in everyday life and will have basic skills for addressing questions about language and social relations with which they will be confronted in their academic and non-academic lives. Students will be evaluated on and participation, discussion leadership, short assignments, a media project, a speech event analysis, and a final project.