RSSS590
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RSSS590 - Identity, Language, & Nation
Course ID
041769
Course Description
This course explores, through a range of topics and theoretical lenses, the relationship between language, identity, and larger social and cultural contexts in Russia, the Post-Soviet geopolitical arena and beyond. We will first examine the ways in which language is used to create personal and group identities and how different cultural, social, and national identities are set off against one another, and against the criteria for inclusion or exclusion within and across national boundaries and various human communities of practice. We will then examine how particular forms of speech, language varieties, and accents are tied to specific traits of speakers and the ways in which the perception of particular people and the way they communicate impacts the projection of social and cultural characteristics. Finally, we will explore the critical dimensions of the language-identity relationship, looking at the function of language to build and divide nations, define peoples, create inequalities, and shape ideologies and local literacy practices in communities, digital spaces, and educational settings. Students will examine various approaches to theorizing identity in sociolinguistics and second language acquisition studies, and will learn to disentangle such constructs as multilingual identity, national\\local\\ethnic identity, subjectivity, self-concept, mobile identity, digital identity, the self-system, etc.
Min Units
3
Max Units
3
Repeatable for Credit
No
Grading Basis
OPT - Student Option ABCDE/PF
Career
Graduate
Course Attributes
CE - CL (Cross Listed), GIDP - SLAT (Sec. Lang. Acquisition & Teach)
Course Requisites
Cross Listed Courses
May be convened with
RSSS490
Component
Lecture
Optional Component
No