Anthropology 329: Language in Society
College of Social and Behavioral Sciences, NAU
Fall 2006, lecture T/Th 11:10-12:25
3 credit hours

Note: This syllabus is subject to revision. Students are responsible to check the course’s Vista page calendar before each class (twice weekly) for such changes and for assignments and course-related materials.

Instructor: James M. Wilce, Ph.D.
Office hours: Mon. 3:00-4:00; Tuesdays 1-2; and by appointment (Really, ask me for an appointment outside of the appointed times if they don’t work for you—meeting with you is important.)
Office location: Emerald City, Bldg. 98D, Room 101E.
Contacts: Office phone 523-2729, email: jim.wilce@nau.edu
G.A.: Nat Krancus
Course prerequisites: Declared major in anthropology with senior or junior standing on Louie. Seniors with a linguistics minor will be accepted as space permits.
Course description: Survey of language and its role in society and culture, presenting a variety of approaches to the analysis of actual speech and speech events as sociocultural phenomena. This course is an overview of linguistic anthropology—the branch of anthropology that links the analysis of linguistic/semiotic form to the interpretation of sociocultural phenomena.
Course objectives: to provide an understanding of language as a human sociocultural phenomenon through:
— exploring language as a cultural resource, speaking as a social practice
—exploring how languages are organized (phonetics, phonology, morphology, semantics, syntax, and pragmatics) through exercises in descriptive linguistics
— introducing big issues (anthropological theory) surrounding language as one among many systems of signs evident in the natural and human worlds
— broadening students’ visions of the social and linguistic world and pointing to linkages between language and social phenomena
— enabling students to develop accurate descriptions of language encountered in their environments through recording and analysis of naturally-occurring speech
— enhancing the potential for enjoying cross-cultural and cross-linguistic contacts throughout life through an exposure to a range of languages and ways of speaking
Course structure: The approach taken in this course combines lectures, in-class discussion, exercises, and field research assignments. In break-out periods in class, students will work with the instructor and G.A. on the skills necessary to carry out analytic exercises, field recording, and transcription. Videos listed as required for class viewing (see last page of syllabus) will be broadcast by the library on NAU’s channels at times announced on the course’s Vista pages.
Texts and materials:
Required texts:
1) Bonvillain, Nancy. Latest edition. Language, culture, and communication. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall. (BV)
2) Duranti, Alessandro. 1997. Linguistic Anthropology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (LA)
3) Ohio State University. 9th edition. Language files: Materials for an introduction to language. (OSU) (Exercises are listed as follows in the schedule: 1.5 [etc.])
Recommended:
4) Duranti, Alessandro, ed. 2006. Companion to Linguistic Anthropology. Malden, MA: Blackwell.
5) ________________, ed. 2001. Linguistic Anthropology: A Reader. Oxford
Malden, MA: Blackwell. (R)
6) ________________, ed. 2000 Key Terms in Language and Culture. Malden: Blackwell. (K)

Other readings and required materials:
6) There will be some outside readings on Webreserve, which you must download from the course’s Vista pages. You can print these Adobe pdf files from the computers at Cline or any of the Learning Resource Center computers on campus. Library or Learning Resource Center staff sometimes have time to help you do this.
7) Tape recorder, or digital audio recorder; camcorder access would be very useful but is not required. No mini audio tapes; these are of poor quality.

Assignments:
1) Written exercises in linguistic analysis are to be found in OSU or will be available online. Exercises must be turned in weekly according to the schedule on the last page as announced in lecture. Some will entail analysis of field recordings (audio and video).
2) There will be a fieldwork assignment designed to introduce you to the work linguistic anthropologists do. You will write a final paper analyzing naturally-occurring speech that you have recorded and transcribed. A list of approved topics and readings, along with instructions, will be published on the course’s Vista pages.
4) Before the final paper, to help you learn the theoretical background for it, you will write a brief critique— not a summary, but a critical contextualization— of one or two readings outside of those listed here, according to your topic.
5) Other assignments may be announced in lecture and posted on the course website.

Quizzes:
There will be regular quizzes on the readings. These are to be completed by the times announced on the Vista calendar.

Tests:
There will be a midterm and a cumulative final exam. The midterm will be mostly objective but may include some short essay questions. The final may contain both sorts of questions. Exams will cover lectures and readings. In addition to tests, quizzes may be given on reading assignments, even before lectures on that topic have been given.

Grading system:
Grades will be assigned on a point basis. Although the points will eventually translate into letter grades, letter grades will not be written on assignments or tests. Students will be responsible to calculate their standing throughout the semester according to any announcements during lectures (e.g. if a curve is assigned to a particular midterm) or by using the traditional percentage breakdown (>90% of the potential points = “A,” etc.).
Failure to hand in a given assignment will result in an automatic “F.”
            The total of 500 points will be assigned as follows:


Quizzes

&Exams

250

Papers & exercises

200

Attendance and Participation

50

500

Quizzes

50

Research paper

75

Attendance/participation

50

 

Midterm

75

Analysis exercises

100

 

 

 

Final

125

Critical review

25

 

 

 

A= 450 points, or 90% of the highest grade in the class, whichever is to your benefit.
B= 400 points, or 80%  “                    “                      “                                  “
C= 350 points, or 70% “                     “                      “                                  “
D= 300 points, or 60% “                     “                      “                                  “
F= less than 300 points, or below 60% of the highest grade in the class

Common courtesy: Come to class on time, remain until lecture is formally over (i.e., don’t start packing up before the lecture is over), don’t leave the class room during class, don’t talk among yourselves when someone else has the floor, don’t put your feet up, and don’t use or monitor walkman-type devices, cell phones, tape recorders, or pagers in the classroom.

Specific course policies:

  1. Students who miss the first two lectures will be administratively dropped.
  2. In-class behavior: An atmosphere of mutual respect, and respect for the university, will be enforced. Example: Putting feet on desks is unacceptable; gum chewing does not show or invite respect.
  3. There will be no re-tests or make-up tests. In case of well-attested medical emergencies, an essay exam will be given— in essence, a more difficult version of the missed exam.
  4. Assignment deadlines: Assignments will be graded down 10% for every class period they are late. Send completed homework assignments in to class with a friend if you are sick and cannot deliver the paper in person on the due date.
  5. Attendance and participation: Students are responsible for everything said during class; your classmates’ contributions to discussion sometimes give shape to a particular exam question. My lecture notes will not be given to those who miss class. Part of your grade will reflect regular positive participation in class, lab, and office hours. “Disagree without being disagreeable.” Attend regularly, be on time, and be responsible. If you find you must always be late or leave early, you must drop the class. Note: Lectures will supplement the readings. In no case will the lecture duplicate the readings.

Lab hours are for your benefit; this is a lab course, and the lab is required. Lab hours will be used to practice how to solve analytic problems and to transcribe discourse; a few hours will be devoted to videos later in the semester.

  1. There will be no tolerance of cheating on exams or homework. Students suspected of cheating may be confronted during or after any quiz or exam and will receive an “F.” Analysis problems are to be solved individually.
  2. Plagiarism in written assignments will not be tolerated. It is not hard for an instructor to detect which words are a student’s and which have been copied, even if the source is not our textbook. Points will be taken off for copying material written by others without citing the source properly. For example, you might mention “natural selection in favor of high intelligence” in a paper, in which case you must cite the author, the date of publication, and the page number of the quotation (Bonvillain 1995: 17). Even if you paraphrase, you should give credit in precisely the same way if your idea comes directly from a given page of writing, and simply leave off the page number if your statement is indebted to another’s writing in a more general way. The positive message is to do your own work in the final paper: your own data-collection, analysis, and interpretation. Dialogue with the ideas of other thinkers, but don’t lose your own voice.
  3. Writing papers: Students with difficulties in writing research papers and essay questions on exams will be referred for tutorial assistance on campus. Failure to follow through with referrals made by the professor will affect the grade of your final paper.

NOTE- This syllabus, including the schedule on the next page, is subject to revision. Students are responsible for announcements made and/or distributed in class, whether or not they are present in class.


Course outline/schedule


Wk

Starting date

Lectures

Textbook
Readings

Web readings & other assignments

Films & recommended reading

 

Quzzes &Exams

1

8/29

1st Lec:WelcomeToLinguistic Anthropology, SemioticsViaMocheArchaeology, Primate Semiotics

BV 1, OSU 1.4, 2.1-2; LA1

Two readings from Vista:
Noble and Davidson 1996, and
Urban 1992

K 107-110
My article on linguistic anthropology on Wikipedia (under Web Links)

Thursday: Quiz 1 on the two Vista readings,

2

9/5

Formal linguistics: Phonology

BV 2, LA 6
OSU 3.1-4, 4.1-4

Salzmann: Design
features of language

 

Quiz 2 on Salzmann,  LA 1, OSU

 

 

Formal linguistics: Morphology;

OSU 5.1, 5.4 , 5.5

OSU 4.5 (1.6, 2.2)

3

9/12

Formal linguistics: Syntax etc.;
Language structure & meaning

OSU 6.1-3, 6.6
LA chs. 2-3

 

K 87-90

Quiz 3 on LA6

 

 

Duplex signs;

OSU 13.1-2

OSU 5.6 (1.4)

K 83-86; 223-6
264-7

 

4

9/19

Ethnolinguistics 1 & 2

BV 3

Morphology exerc. Due 9/21

K 119-121, 147-9

Quiz 4 on BV 3

5

9/26

The ethnography of communication 1 & 2

BV4

“We” exercise due 9/28

LA4

Quiz 5 on BV 4

 

 

Formality

 

 

“Synchrony” film; Irvine ch ( R)

 

6

10/3

Conversation; Performativity; Politeness; Speech Act Theory

LA 5, BV 5; OSU 8.2

Goodwin 1979

 

 

7

10/10

Review & midterm

LA 7-8

Audio transcr. exerc. due

 

Midterm

8

10/17

Sociolinguistics 1 & 2

BV 6,
OSU 10.1-10.5

 

“Language”
K129-131,180-183

 

9

10/24

English Gender 1

BV 7, OSU 10.7

Video transc. due

Ochs&Taylor ch. & Gal ch. (R); “Amer. Tongues”

 

 

 

English Gender 2

 

Make recording for final paper

K 212-5, 260-263

 

10

10/31

Comparative Sociolinguistics of Gender; CrosslinguisticGender(2): Iroquois

BV 8,

Ochs and Schieffelin (RDR, or Vista)

 

 

11

11/7

Languagae acquisition; Language socialization 1

BV10

Critique due

“Preschool in Three Cultures”
K 227-230

 

 

 

Language Socialization 2

 

 

Basso, “Stalking w/Stories”

 

12

11/14

Language and institutions 1&2

BV 13

First draft of paper due 11/13

“Iisaw” & “The Lang. You Cry In”

 

13

11/22

Verbal art as performance 1&2

 

Basso#1(Portraits)
Basso#2 Speaking with Names

“Verbal Art and the Art of Lament”
K 79-82; Bauman ch. (R)

 

11/24-11/25 Thanksgiving, University Closed

 

K 49-51, 238-240

 

14

11/29

Modernity

LCC 11

Paper due 11/26

“Lament film II”

 

15

12/6

329 Final Lecture

 

 

 

 

 

 

Review

 

 

 

 

16

 

Final  (date TBA on Vista)

 

 

 

Final