ANTH 204 -
INTRODUCTION TO LINGUISTIC ANTHROPOLOGY
Professor: Valentina
Pagliai
Oberlin College
MWF 1:30pm-2:20pm
Office: King 320a
Phone: (440) 775-8372
office
(440) 774-6270 home
Office Hours: MWF
2:30-3:30pm
(Or by appointment)
E-mail: valentina.pagliai@oberlin.edu
Tutor: Erin Grady
Office hours: T-Th
1:30-2:30pm
Office: King 320a
Course Description: This course furnishes
an introduction to core concepts and methodology pertaining to the analysis of
language. Students will explore
key areas of current research, including sociolinguistics, language
socialization, language and gender, non-verbal communication, and
literacy. Through practical
exercises, the students will learn foundations in phonology, morphology, and
syntax, as well as basic discourse analysis transcription skills. The course is intended as a basis for
more advanced courses in linguistic anthropology and in related areas, and no
prior training is required.
Course Goals: My main goal in this
course is to give an overview, albeit necessarily partial, of studies on
language. At the same time, I
would like to raise the students¹ interest in communication, by showing how
such an apparently esoteric discipline may actually have quite practical
applications. The course is
divided into two parts. In a
³Monday series² of lessons, we will learn the basics of structural linguistics
analysis of language: from phonology to morphology, from syntax to
semantics. Priority will be given
to learning by doing, through series of exercises to be done both in class and
at home. A tutor will be available
to help the students finish the exercises successfully. The remainder of the course will focus
on some of the most classic topics studied by sociolinguists and linguistic
anthropologists. Priority will be
given to the discussion of the reading material; the lessons will also include
videos and students presentations, as well as traditional lectures. The goal is to keep a dialogue alive
around each topic, aiming at showing their connection to the present day lives
and experiences of the students, and to the phenomena that are affecting our
society today.
Texts:
1) Bonvillain, Nancy
1993. Language, Culture and
Communication: The Meaning of Messages.
Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
2) Lippi-Green, Rosina
1997. English with an Accent: Language Ideology and Discrimination in the
United States. New York: Routledge.
3) Additional Readings: Copies
of the course's additional readings are in E-res.
Note: All Readings and Exercises are to be done by
the date they are listed on the syllabus. All videos listed will be shown in
class.
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 0
F 9/3 -- Introduction. Preview of the course: goals, readings,
requirements, grading. Linguistic
Anthropology as a subfield of Anthropology.
Discussion Assignment (#1) Given: Prepare
questions for class discussion.
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 1
W 9/8 -- Language in Society, Communication
and Performance.
Readings: - Finnegan, Ruth 2001 ³Not the
Message: Media, Meanings and Magicality.² In H. Knoblauch & H. Kotthoff
(Eds.) Verbal Art across Cultures: The Aesthetics and Proto-Aesthetics of
Communication. Tubingen: Gunter
Narr Verlag. Pp. 33-58. (E-res)
F
9/10 -- Sociolinguistics.
Readings: - Bonvillain, Ch. 1,
³Introduction² pp. 1-5.
- Bonvillain, Ch. 6. ³Social Stratification²
³Caste² and ³Class² pp. 140-159.
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 2
W 9/15 -- Dialects
and Varieties in the United States:
Video: ³American Tongues.²
F 9/17 – Discussion: What is a
language? What is a standard language?
Readings: -
Lippi-Green, ³Introduction,² "The Myth of Non-Accent," ³The standard
Language Myth² & ³Language Ideology and the language subordination model,²
pp. 3-6 & pp. 41-73.
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 3
W 9/22 – Linguistic Variation. Dialects and Varieties, Communicative
Style and Speech Communities.
F 9/24 – Linguistic and its
ideologies.
Readings:
- Lippi-Green ³Hillbillies, rednecks, and southern belles² pp. 202-216.
- Lippi-Green, ³Language ideologies in the
workplace and the judicial system² pp. 152-170.
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 4
W 9/29 – Language and discrimination.
(1st group presentation)
1st
exam distributed (take home)
Readings:
- Lippi-Green ³The stranger within the gates² pp. 217-239.
F 10/1 – African
American Vernacular English: Characteristics and History.
1st exam due.
Readings: - Bonvillain Ch. 6, ³race² pp.
159-178.
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 5
W 10/6 -- Language, Ideologies, and the
Ebonics controversy. (2nd group presentation)
Readings: - Lippi-Green, pp. 176-201.
F 10/8 – Sociolinguistics: Language
Change.
Languages in Contact. What happens when languages meet? Pidginization,
Creolization and Language Generation. Where did Tok Pisin came from?
Readings: - Bonvillain Ch. 12, pp.
336-339 only.
- Bickerton, D. 1983. ³Creole Languages.² In
Wang (ed.) The Emergence of Language. Papers from Scientific American. (E-res)
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 6
W 10/13 -- Sociolinguistics: Language change
continued.
Video: ³Next Year¹s Words² (from the series ³Story of English²).
F 10/15 – Sociolinguistics: Language
change continued. (3rd group presentation)
2nd Exam distributed (take home)
Readings: - Alleyne, M. 1988. The Roots
of Jamaican Culture. London: Pluto Press, Ch. 1 & 6. (E-res)
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 7 -
FALL BREAK
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 8
W 10/27 -- Linguistic Anthropology in the
panorama of the studies on language. The disciplines studying language. Structural
approaches, Performance approaches.
2nd Exam due
Assignment #2 Distributed
Readings: - Duranti, Alessandro
1997. "The Scope of
Linguistic Anthropology" in Linguistic Anthropology. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press. Pp. 1-22. (E-res)
- Duranti, Alessandro 1997. "Transcription: From Writing to
Digitized Images" in Linguistic Anthropology. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press. Pp. 134-144. (E-res)
F 10/29 – The study of everyday speech.
Video ³In a Manner of Speaking.²
Readings: - Bonvillain, ch. 5,
³Structural Properties of conversation² p. 111-116.
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 9
W 11/2 -- Transcription as theory:
Transcription & Translation.
Readings: - Duranti, Alessandro
1997. "Transcription: From
Writing to Digitized Images" in Linguistic Anthropology. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press. Pp. 144-161. (E-res)
F 11/5 -- Transcription as theory:
Transcription & Translation.
Assignment #2 Due
Readings:
- Tedlock, D. 1983 "On the Translation of
Style in Oral Narrative." in Spoken Word and the Work of Interpretation.
Philadelphia: UP Press, pp. 31-56. (E-res)
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 10
W 11/10 – First Language Acquisition
and Language Socialization.
Readings: - Bonvillain, ch. 9 pp. 241-268,
ch. 10 pp. 272-295.
F 11/12 -- First Language Acquisition and
Language Socialization.
Readings: - Ochs, E. 1982. ³Talking to
Children in Western Samoa.² Language in Society. (E-res)
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 11
W 11/17 – First Language Acquisition
and Language Socialization. (4th Group Presentation)
Readings: - Lippi-Green, pp. 79-103.
F 11/19 -- Nonverbal Communication.
3rd Exam distributed
Video: ³Body Language²
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 12
W 11/24 -- Nonverbal Communication: Gestures, Paralanguage,
Prosody, Proxemics and use of space.
3rd Exam Due
Readings: - Bonvillain, ch. 2,
³non-verbal communication² p. 35-43.
- Miller, Laura 1991. ³Verbal Listening Behavior in Conversations Between Japanese
and Americans." In Blommaert
& Verschueren (Eds.) The
Pragmatics of Intercultural and International Communication. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. (Pp. 111-130). (E-res)
F 11/26 -- THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 13
M 11/29 -- Intercultural Communication: Cross-Talk.
Video: ³Cross-Talk²
Readings: - Jupp, T. C., C. Roberts, and
J. Cook-Gumperz 1982. ³Language
and Disadvantage: The Hidden Process." In J. Gumperz (ed.) Language and Social Identity. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press. (Pp. 232-56). (E-res)
W 12/1 -- Intercultural Communication: Cross-Talk, continued: (5th
Group Presentation)
Readings: - Bunte, Pamela and R. Franklin
1992. ³You can't get there from
here: Taking Southern Paiute testimony as intercultural
communication." Anthropological
Linguistics
34: 19-44. (E-res)
F 12/3 -- Literacy
Readings: - Brice-Heath, Shirley 1982
³What No Bedtime Stories Means.² Language in Society 11/1:49-76. (E-res)
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 14
M 12/6 – Literacy.
Readings: - Duranti, A. & E. Ochs,
"Literacy instruction in Western Samoa," in B. Schieffelin & P.
Gilmore (Eds.) The Acquisition of Literacy: Ethnographic Perspectives, Ablex,
Norwood, NJ, 1986, pp. 213-233. (E-res)
W 12/8 -- Literacy. (6th Group
Presentation)
Readings: - Lippi-Green ³The Educational
System² pp. 104-132.
F 12/10 -- Language and Gender.
Readings: - Bonvillain, ch. 7, pp.
181-213, ch. 8, pp. 216-239.
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WEEK 15
M
12/13 -- Language, Gender and Power: (7th Group Presentation) Concluding
Remarks & Final Review.
Readings: - Ochs, E. and Taylor, C. 1995.
"The 'Father Knows Best' Dynamic in Dinnertime Narratives." In Hall
and Bucholtz (eds.) Gender Articulated. New York: Routledge. (E-res)
____________________________________________________________
MONDAY
CLASSES IN STRUCTURAL LINGUISTICS
Note: In-class exercises will be done, and
other exercises will be assigned as homework every week.
Week 2 -- M 9/13 -- Phonetics.
Readings: - ³Language Files² Department
of Linguistics, Ohio State University. Pp. 45-47, 49-57. (E-res)
Week 3 -- M 9/20 -- Phonetics.
Readings: - "Language Files"
Pp. 65-76. (E-res)
Week 4 -- M 9/27 -- Phonology.
Readings: -
"Language Files" Pp. 89-93, 95-98, 101-106. (E-res)
Week 5 -- M 10/4 -- Phonology.
Readings: -
"Language Files" Pp. 117-119. (E-res)
Week 6 -- M 10/11 -- Morphology.
Readings: -
"Language Files" Pp. 127-130, 133-135, 137-141, 143-146. (E-res)
Week 8 -- M 10/25 -- Morphology.
Readings: -
"Language Files" Pp. 157-161. (E-res)
Week 9 -- M 11/1 -- Syntax.
Readings: - Fromkin, Victoria &
Robert Rodman 1993. "Syntax: The Sentence Patterns of Language" In An
Introduction to Language" Holt, Rinehart & Winston. Pp. 72-97. (E-res)
Week 10 -- M 11/8 -- Syntax.
Readings: - Fromkin&Rodman ³Syntax:
The Sentence Patterns of Language² Pp. 97-113. (E-res)
Week 11 -- M 11/15 -- Semantics.
Readings: - Bonvillain Ch.2 pp. 28-30
³Semantics;² Ch. 3 pp. 51-57 ³Lexical and cultural categories² (³Ethnoscience²
excluded).
- Spradley, James P. 1988 ³Pick up your Bed and
Walk.² In You Owe Yourself a Drunk: An Ethnography of Urban Nomads. Lanham: University
Press of America. (E-res)
Week 12 -- M 11/22 – Pragmatics.
Readings: - Bonvillain CH. 4 ³Speech
Acts² pp. 92-94 & ³Routines² pp. 102-108.
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FINALS' WEEK
Final Exam: Monday December 20, 9-11am
The final exam may include comprehensive
questions on all previous material.
According to college policy, I cannot reschedule
your final exam. In exceptional
cases, the Dean of Studies, Dr. Katherine Stuart, can approve of such a
rescheduling. If you think an
exceptional case applies to you, please talk to her about it.
Course
Policies:
Code of honor
The
Oberlin College Students' Code of Honor applies to the course, please
familiarize yourself with it: http://www.oberlin.edu/students/student_pages/honor_code.html
Readings should be completed by
the day they are listed on the syllabus; this will help you follow lectures and
prepare for lectures and section.
Exercises are due at the
beginning of the class session. I
will NOT accept exercises submitted by e-mail. More information about the Exercises will be distributed
later on, during the course.
Late Exercises
Exercises must be turned in on time at the
beginning of class. Exercises will
be graded down 1 point for each day that they are late.
Participation to class Discussions is fundamental. These may be done in smaller or larger
groups. Some discussions may
involve the whole class together.
Presence in class is expected, and I will
take the roll at the beginning of each class. Students present at the roll will
receive 1 point. Students who are
late may not be recorded.
Grades:
First exam (take home) 5
% of final grade
Second exam (take home) 5
%
Third exam (take home) 10
%
Final Exam 25
%
Homework Exercises 20
%
Class presentation (group project) 10
%
Participation (discussions & assignments) 20
%
Presence in class 5
%
_________
100
%
A+ = 96% of grade; A = 93%; A- = 90%, B+ = 86%;
B = 82%; B- = 78%; C+ = 74%; C = 70%; C- = 60%; NE = Less than 60%; D = 55%; F
= Less than 55%.
Final Note: Although the syllabus
will be followed as much as possible, it is intended as a guideline and
circumstances may require a change to the schedule. Students are responsible for any changes announced in class.