LING 8

“LANGUAGES AND CULTURES OF THE UNITED STATES”

Spring 2000

This course will examine the linguistic and cultural diversity of the United States from historical and cultural perspectives.

The course satisfies the Muir College cultural diversity requirement and the Revelle College American Culture requirement.

Time:Tuesday and Thursday, 9:35-10:55 am

PlaceHSS 1330

InstructorProfessor Maria Polinsky

polinsky@ling.ucsd.edu

OfficeMcGill Hall 5332

Office hoursMonday 2-3pm

Thursday 1-2 pm

And by appointment—to schedule an appointment, please contact Laura Silva at 534-3601 or lsilva@ucsd.edu

TAHeidi Tonomura

htonomura@ucsd.edu

OfficeMcGill Hall, 2318

Office hoursTuesday 11-1

Goals of the course:

·to introduce the students to the variety of languages and cultures in the United States 

·to address and dispel common stereotypes concerning language and speech (e.g., that certain languages are more sophisticated than others, that people who don’t speak right don’t think right)

·to discuss the interaction of linguistic, cultural, social, and political issues

·to introduce current trends in cultural and linguistic diversity

Course requirements
1) Regular class attendance and participation
2) Readings and lecture note taking
3) Homework assignments (3 sets) (20%). Assignments given out in week n are due on Tue of week n+1. Late assignments are not accepted. 

Assignments will be returned after the Tuesday class of week n+2. In section you will discuss homework assignments and prepare for the midterm and final exam. 

4) Midterm (30% of grade). Date: May 9, 2000, in class. Closed-book, multiple choice and several short answer questions.

5) Final (50% of grade). Date: June 12, 2000, 8-11 am, HSS 1330.

Exams
·Exams are multiple-choice and short-answer. The midterm and the final will be graded on a modified curve.
·Exams include questions based on lectures, videos, home assignments, and readings. 
·A study guide is handed out before each exam to direct students' study efforts to the most important topics.

·The professor holds review sessions before each exam. 

Class format
·Classes have a mixed lecture-discussion format. 

NOTE: Not all the material covered in the lectures is included in the assigned readings, so please take your lecture notes seriously.

·Videos are used throughout the course. Five videos are shown outside of class as part of the course (duration ranges from 20 to 50 minutes). Questions based on the videos will be included in the midterm and the final. All the videos are shown in FVL (first floor, SSH).
Home assignments and exercise sessions
·There will be 3 homework assignments
·In section we will go over these exercises and over the questions likely to appear on the exams. Thus, attendance at exercise sessions will help prepare you for the exams. Section time will be announced in Week 1. See the syllabus for the weeks in which exercise sections meet.

Textbook (referred to as T below):
Charles Ferguson and Shirley Brice Heath, eds. Language in the USA. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996 (paperback available in bookstore; copies of the relevant chapters are also available at Soft Reserves).
Packet of readings available at Soft Reserves (referred to as P below).

The packet also includes the three homework assignments.

Syllabus

In the syllabus below, pay close attention to the order of readings and videos. Unless indicated otherwise, the readings follow the lecture to which they pertain and should be done after that lecture (otherwise you will have difficulty following the subsequent lectures/readings). The order of videos and readings is not accidental—if the vidoe is mentioned first, that means that you will need to know the video material in order to follow the readings.
If you have difficulty understanding some terms in the readings, consult the glossary in Language in the USA (pp. 527-533). If the glossary does not help, consult linguistic encyclopedias and dictionaries under call number P29 in the Reference Section of the Geisel Library. My favorite source is the glossary in vol. 4 of the International Encyclopedia of Linguistics (ed. by W. Bright) but feel free to consult other reference materials as well. A good on-line glossary of linguistic terms can be found at:

http://www.sil.org/LINGUISTICS/glossary/

Week 1 (April 3-7)

1.1Overall structure of the course. Study of language in the social context
Reading: Fishman ‘The Sociology of Language’ (P)

1.2Language, dialect, idiolect. Types of relationships between languages. Major components identified in the representation of language.

  Reading: Comrie (P) (required: section 1; section 2.5, section 3; the rest is recommended)

Video (out of class): “American Tongues” (on reserve at FVL)

Week 2 (April 10-14)

2.1They were here first: Native American languages in the pre-colonial times—geographical distribution and genetic affiliation
2.2Main language characteristics of American Indian languages. Native American names on the US map. Native American words in English.

  Readings: T, ch. 6 (required); Chafe (P) (recommended).

Assignment1.

Week 3 (April 17-21)

3.1.Native American languages of California. The extinction of Native American languages: Ishi, the last of the Yana (case study).
Video (out of class): “Ishi” (on reserve at FVL)

Reading:Kroeber, pp. 10-31 (P)

  Make sure to watch the video before reading Kroeber

  Assignment 1 Due

3.2Michif—a unique mixed language
Reading: Bakker & Muysken (P) (sections 4.1, 4.3, 4.7, 4.8 required; other sections recommended)

Week 4 (April 24-28)

4.1Spanish in the US. Early colonial Spanish
Reading: T, ch. 9

4.2Spanish in modern day USA. Bilingualism and diglossia. Code-switching. 

Readings: Bonvillain (P), 320-326; Fishman ‘Societal bilingualism’ (P)

4.3.Discussion Section 1: Discussion of Assignment 1, Time TBA

Assignment 2

Week 5 (May 1-5)

5.1.Spanish in California. Chicano studies.
Reading: Garcia (P)

Assignment 2 Due

5.2French in North America. Lousiana French
ReadingsT, ch. 12 (concentrating on the French component) and parts of ch. 4 (pp. 69-73, and 77-81—skip Gullah); 

5.3Discussion Section 2: Review of assignment 2. Review for the midterm. 

Time TBA 

Week 6 (May 8-12)

6.1.Midterm. In-class, closed-book exam. There will be several multiple-choice questions and several short-answer questions.
6.2.German in America: History and general overview. (Guest lecture by Professor Kluender)

Video (out of class): “Where Have all the Germans Gone” (on reserve at FVL)

Readings: T, ch. 12 (concentrating on the German component) and parts of ch. 16 (pp. 339-341 and p. 350, starting with “The immigrant languages”, through 363, stopping at “Slavic languages”). 

Week 7 (May 15-19)

7.1.Brief history of English and the development of English dialects. 
Video (out of class): “History of the English Language (Judgment of Solomon)” (on reserve at FVL)—must be seen before the lecture on Thursday
No separate reading on this; a detailed handout will be provided. Please take detailed lecture notes and notes after the video.

7.2.Geographical and socio-economic factors in language variation. English dialects in the United States—an overview

7.3.Discussion Section 4: Review of the midterm. Time TBA

Reading: T, ch. 3 (required); Labov (P) (recommended)

Week 8 (May 22-26)

8.1Gender differences in modern English
Reading: Bonvillain, ch. 7 (P).

8.2Language, race, ethnicity—differences in modern English

Readings: T, ch. 5 (required); ch. 19 (recommended).

Video (out of class): “Black on White” (on reserve at FVL)

Assignment 3.

Week 9 (May 29-June 2)

9.1Creoles of the USA. Gullah
Reading: T, Ch. 4.

  Assignment 3 Due

9.2Recent immigrant languages in the US—geographical distribution, acculturation, mixing, code-switching
Reading: T, Ch. 15.

Week 10 (June 5-9)

10.1Immigrant languages in the US: A Case Study
Reading: T, ch. 20 

10.2Review for the final.

Saturday, June 10.9:30-11: Review session with professor and TA

Final Exam: June 12, 2000, 8-11 am


Maintained by Dennis Fink. Email: dennis@ling.ucsd.edu