Linguistic Diversity and Cultural Diversity

Curriculum Guideline

Effective Date:
Course
Discontinued
No
Course Code
LING 1102
Descriptive
Linguistic Diversity and Cultural Diversity
Department
Modern Languages
Faculty
Language, Literature & Performing Arts
Credits
3.00
Start Date
End Term
Not Specified
PLAR
No
Semester Length
15 weeks
Max Class Size
35
Course Designation
Certificate in Global Competency
Industry Designation
None
Contact Hours
4 contact hours per week
Method(s) Of Instruction
Lecture
Tutorial
Learning Activities

Lectures, in-class tutorials, group work, group discussion, problem solving, data analysis, short reports by students

 

Course Description
This course is an introduction to the non-structural aspects of language with an emphasis on cultural diversity. Students will develop an appreciation of cultural diversity by studying similarities and differences among languages of the world, 3 from the Indo-European and 3 from the non-Indo-European language families. Topics covered may include, but are not restricted to, language development and language attrition/language death, language classification, typology and universals, language change, meaning in language, writing, the modern world and communication.
Course Content

Part I: Language

1. What is Language?

Defining language; language and speech; language and society; language and culture

2. Studying Language

The scientific approach to language; anthropological linguistics; linguistic analysis; language, mind and culture; language, discourse and variation

3. The Origin and Evolution of Language

Theories; reconstruction; core vocabularies; language change; primate language experiments

4. Language Levels

Describing language; the phonological level; the morphological level; the syntactic level; the semantic level

 

Part II: Language and Society

1. Language and Social Phenomena

Language and gender; markedness theory; language and style; naming people; artificial languages

2. Using Language

Conversational devices; speech acts; situational focussing; language functions; language and myth

3. Writing

Writing systems; literacy; abbreviated writing; online communication

4. Variations

Variant types; slang; jargon; borrowing

 

Part III: Language, Mind and Culture

1. Language and Classification

The Whorfian Hypothesis; specialized vocabularies; made-up languages

2. Language and Concepts

Sound symbolism; words and concepts; anthropomorphism; grammar and thought

3. Metaphor

What is a metaphor?; conceptual metaphors; metonymy and irony; metaphor and gesture; cultural reification

4. Pop Language

What is pop language?; hip talk; hip talk and gender

 

 

Learning Outcomes

Students will develop an appreciation of cultural diversity by analyzing a variety of language samples drawn among different languages, Indo-European and non-Indo-European.

By the end of term, the successful student will:

  • better understand the role the non-structural parts play in language
  • acquire some strategies to analyse and compare language samples
  • appreciate cultural diversity and be aware that different cultures may have different linguistic strategies to encode concepts

 

 

Means of Assessment

A typical assessment would include the following elements:

  • Attendance/participation/preparation 15%
  • Short oral reports as part of in class discussions 25%
  • 4 Assignments at 5% each (data analysis) 20%
  • 4 exams to a total of 20%
  • Portfolio 5% (to accompany the poster, as a way of keeping track of the progress)
  • Poster presentation 15% (final work)

(Note: no assignment will be more than 20%)

Textbook Materials

A current edition of a textbook such as the following:

Danesi, Marcel. Language, society and culture: Introducing Anthropological Linguistics. Toronto: Canadian Scholars, Inc.

 

Prerequisites

None

Corequisites

None

Equivalencies

None

Which Prerequisite

None