Overview

Faculty

Chaise Ladousa (Anthropology)

Mariam Durrani (Anthropology)

Masaaki Kamiya (Japanese), director

Department/Program Goals

The Linguistics Program exposes students to the study of the structure and use of language, and urges students to find the ways in which structure and use are interrelated. Students can explore language structure and use with faculty in the program through experimental and ethnographic methods.

Concentration/Minor Description and Requirements

Linguistics is the scientific study of language. Students will learn to examine language and languages in terms of structure (phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics) and social use (pragmatics, language acquisition, discourse analysis, sociolinguistics, cultural interpretation).

The Minor in Linguistics is administered by Masaaki Kamiya (EALL), Chaise LaDousa (Anthropology), and Mariam Durrani (Anthropology).

The minor in linguistics consists of five courses: an introductory course, one focusing on language structure, one focusing on language in society and two electives. These courses are to be selected from the linguistics courses currently available at Hamilton listed below.

Introductory courses:
LING-100 Introduction to Linguistics (Kamiya)

Language structure courses:
JAPN-219/JAPN-319 Language acquisition (Kamiya)
JAPN-230 Morphology and Syntax: The Analysis of Structure (Kamiya)

Language in society courses:
ANTHR-234 Communication and Culture (Durrani)
ANTHR-257 Language, Gender and Sexuality (LaDousa)
ANTHR-264 Ethnography of Literacy and Visual Language (LaDousa)
ANTHR-270 The Ethnography of Communication (LaDousa)
ANTHR-323 Verbal Art and Performance (LaDousa)
ANTHR-370 Sociolinguistics of Globalization (LaDousa)