93012 - Linguistic Anthropology (1) (Lm)

Academic Year 2022/2023

  • Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
  • Campus: Bologna
  • Corso: Second cycle degree programme (LM) in Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology (cod. 0964)

Learning outcomes

This course provides an introduction to linguistic anthropology—intended as the study of language both as a form of cultural practice and as a tool whereby humans formulate models of social conduct. Students will be exposed to the basics of grammatical and discourse analysis, the examination of communicative practices, the social organization of conversation, the working of language ideologies, the role of linguistic context (indexicality) in discursive activity, the semiotics of the self-presentation, and the performance of collective belonging. Throughout the course, special emphasis will be given to the methodological specificities of linguistic anthropological work, which combines traditional ethnographic methods (such as interviewing and participant-observation) with the use of audio-visual recording and transcription of spontaneous interaction. By learning about how language and other semiotic resources are used across a number of communities in the world, students will gain critical insights into the language/culture interface. By the end of the course, they will achieve a deeper understanding of the role of language in human affairs and of its capacity to formulate and transmit aesthetic values and cultural beliefs.

Course contents

The goal of this course is to provide an introduction to linguistic anthropology and to provide an anthropological understanding of communication as a cultural practice. Through a series of readings and ethnographic tasks, students will achieve a new awareness of the role of language in our lives. Far from being a mere device for the transmission of information, language plays an important role in reproducing structures of social inequality and challenging power relations. In order to develop this awareness students will be encouraged to observe how they themselves speak and interact.

Classes will take place in the Second Semester and will start on Wednesday, February 1, 2023.

Attendance is not mandatory, but this course is designed for regular (not intermittent) attendance. Students who want to be eligible to take the exam as "attending students" may miss a maximum of 5 classes out of 15 (any additional absence will result in the loss of "attending student status"). Alternatively, they will be able to take the exam as "non-attending" students. (see instructions below).

Readings/Bibliography

This course entails two different reading lists depending on whether or not the student chooses to attend lectures and participate in classwork. At the beginning of the course (in early February 2023) prospective students will decide in which capacity they wish to take the course.

 

Students attending class

 

 Mandatory readings:

  • Course readings set: set of articles or book chapters assigned each week (more details on are provided in the course schedule for attending students, provided at the beginning of the semester). All the course materials for attending students will be made available in the ‘teaching materials’ sections of the website, only accessible to Unibo students with institutional credentials.

  • Duranti, Alessandro. Antropologia del linguaggio. Meltemi Editore, 2021. NB It is imperative that students use the 2021 edition, which significantly departs from the previous one (and currently out of print)

Suggested:

  • Duranti, Alessandro, a cura di. Parole chiave su linguaggio e cultura: un lessico per le scienze umane. Meltemi Editore, 2018.

 

Students not attending class

  • Duranti, Alessandro. Antropologia del linguaggio. Meltemi Editore, 2021. (Chapters 2 and 6 excluded) NB It is imperative that students use the 2021 edition, which significantly departs from the previous one (and currently out of print)
  • Duranti, Alessandro "Etnopragmatica. La Forza nel Parlare:, Carocci, Roma, 2007, 153 pp.
  • Sapir, Edward e Benjamin L. Whorf. Linguaggio e relatività, a cura di Marco Carassai, Enrico Crucianelli. Castelvecchi, 2017, 144 pp.
  • Sapir, Edward. Il Linguaggio: Introduzione alla linguistica. Einaudi, 2007. XXX-228 pp. (Chapters 3 and 8 excluded)

 

Teaching methods

Teaching methods will be based both on instructor’s lectures and seminar-like discussions/workshops.

Lectures: the instructor will introduce specific topics and relevant scholarly debates, providing relevant ethnographic examples. Students will be encouraged to comment and ask questions.

Seminar discussions and Workshops: Every week a certain amount of time (approx. 2 hours) will be specifically devoted to collective discussions of the weekly readings, the themes exposed during the lectures, and collective workshops based the notes and observations collected by students in response to weekly prompts.

Assessment methods

Students attending class

Students who regularly attend class and participate in classwork will be assessed through an oral exam on the reading list for attending students (see above), as well as on the basis of their participation in the seminar discussions and workshops, held in class during the semester.

In order to be eligible for the status of attending student, the maximum of permitted absences is 5.

The exam will entail a series of questions aimed at assessing the student’s knowledge of the topics discussed in the assigned readings and in class. Students will be expected to show both their capacity to go into specific details and “capture the larger picture.” Among the elements that concur to the final evaluation there are: detailed knowledge of the readings’ content, property of language, and especially the capacity of establishing connections among the texts and organize the information into complex answers showing expositive and critical skills.

  • Proper language and the ability to critically speak about the books' content will lead to a good/excellent final grade
  • Acceptable language and the ability to resume the books' content will lead to a sufficient/fair grade.
  • Insufficient linguistic proficiency and fragmentary knowledge of the books' content will lead to a failure in passing the exam.

To sign up for the exam, please use the Almaesami website.

 

Students NOT attending class

Students who do not regularly attend class and choose not to engage in classwork will have to sustain an oral exam on the reading list for non-attending students provided above. They will be asked questions aimed at verifying their knowledge of the themes discussed in the texts. Students will be expected to show both their capacity to go into specific details and “capture the larger picture.” The questions will be aimed at testing the students’ ability in exposing with an appropriate language some of the topics tackled by the books, as well as their skills in making connections between different texts in order to build an argument.

· Proper language and the ability to critically speak about the books' content will lead to a good/excellent final grade

· Acceptable language and the ability to summarize the books' content will lead to a sufficient/fair grade.

· Insufficient linguistic proficiency and fragmentary knowledge of the books' content will lead to a failure in passing the exam.

To sign up for the exam, please use the Almaesami website.



 

Teaching tools

The instructor will occasionally use audio-visual sources (documentaries, maps and photos)

Students who attend class are requested to subscribe to the following mailing list (“Teachers-students” distribution list) through which they can receive any urgent communications about changes to the timetable or location of the lectures:

aurora.donzelli._Anthropologia_Linguistica


To register: go to https://www.dsa.unibo.it/default.aspx
Go to SDA, log in and look for "teacher-student lists" on the left drop-down list, then write aurora.donzelli.Antropologia_Linguistica and register

Office hours

See the website of Aurora Donzelli