Concentrations available in the USC Linguistics Program:
Historical Linguistics
Historical linguistics is the study of the way language
changes over time, and involves examining the development of individual
languages and the comparison or related languages. The discipline
partakes of a dualism which is basic in linguistics in that on the one
hand its material consists of particular listable phenomena and events,
and on the other hand we are able to generalize from these data about
how people talk. For instance, if a structural unit of language
has changed in its nature or distribution in linguistic history, that
unit has thus been shown to exist, as effectively as if that unit were
observed to change in the course of language acquisition or in a
language disorder. Because language change thus provides one sort of
laboratory for the study of basic linguistic phenomena, historical
linguistics at the present time is an area of lively theoretical
discussion as well as of concrete scholarly investigations.
Subdisciplines of historical linguistics include
historical phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, and
sociolinguistics. Program faculty have expertise in these general
areas as well as in comparative Celtic, Germanic, Romance, Slavic, and
Indo-European linguistics. Trained historical linguists find
employment in departments of Linguistics, English, foreign languages,
and Anthropology.
Faculty having Historical Linguistics
as an area of interest:
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Dorothy Disterheft
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Associate Professor (English)
Ph.D., University of California at Los Angeles,
1977
Historical linguistics, Indo-European linguistics
(esp. Celtic). |
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Kurt Goblirsch
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Associate Professor (Germanic,
Slavic, & East Asian Languages)
Ph.D.,University of Minnesota, 1990
Comparative Germanic linguistics, historical
phonology, dialectology. |
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D. Eric Holt
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Assistant Professor (Spanish,
Italian, and Portuguese)
Ph.D., Georgetown University, 1997
Phonology, Historical linguistics, dialectology. |
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Scott
Gwara
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Associate Professor (English)
Ph.D., University of Toronto, 1993
Bilingualism in pre-conquest England, Old English
and Anglo-Latin philology. |
Graduate Courses in Historical
Linguistics:
LING 530 Language
Change [= ENGL 580] (3)
Major ways in which phonetics, phonology, syntax, morphology, and
semantics change through language history; social factors which promote
innovation.
LING 730 Historical Linguistics (3)
(Prereq: LING 600, 710) Innovation in phonology, morphology,
syntax, and semantics; evidence from texts, social and regional
dialects; emphasis on theories of language change.
LING 731 History of the
English Language [= ENGL 781] (3)
The historical background of modern English with attention to the major
linguistic and cultural developments which distinguish English from
other related languages. No prior knowledge of Old English or Middle
English is required.
LING 732 History of the
French Language [= FREN 715] (3)
Development of the French language from its origins to 1600.
LING 733 History of the
German Language [= GERM 715] (3)
(Prereq: reading knowledge of High German) Relationship of German
to the other Germanic Languages. Phonological and morphological
development of German. Attention also to syntax, vocabulary, and
dialects.
LING 734 History of the
Spanish Language [= SPAN 715] (3)
Development of the language from its origins to the present day.
Current activities at USC
relating to Historical Linguistics:
Historical Linguistics
Research Group (HLRG) - Meets first Friday of each
month.
Historical Linguistics Research Group is organized by professors
Cooper, Disterheft, and Goblirsch. Each meeting consists of a
presentation by one of the faculty members or students with a
discussion afterward. These meetings are potluck--and some of the
best eatin' you can get in Columbia!
Historical Linguistics Mailing List
(HISTLING)
Dorothy Disterheft moderates HISTLING, a discussion list devoted to all
topics within historical linguistics. It currently has
approximately 475 subscribers from all continents and most countries of
the world. To subscribe, send a message to listserv@vm.sc.edu . In the
text area type: subscribe histling <firstname lastname>, where
you substitute your names for the bracketed material. Send all
inquiries to Dorothy Disterheft, disterh@vm.sc.edu
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Second Language Acquisition/Teaching
Second language acquisition is the study of how people
learn a second language (hereafter, L2) given the kind of exposure they
have to it. This field of study, then, encompasses both the
cognitive processes which determine learning (traditionally thought of
as SLA) and the pedagogical practices which effect and enhance that
learning (traditionally thought of as ESL). By nature, this field
of study is interdisciplinary, since learning processes are understood
especially, but not exclusively, via linguistic, sociolinguistic, and
psycholinguistic perspectives, while classroom practices are informed
by educational linguistic perspectives.
Here at the
University of South Carolina, we take seriously the intimate
relationship between what kind of input learners get and what they do
with it, providing a core set of classes designed to present the
fundamentals of L2 acquisition and teaching. In addition to the
core classes, students have ample freedom to tailor their L2 curriculum
to their own needs and interests, focusing either on understanding how
students learn or on how best to teach, or a combination of the
two. The program of study culminates in the writing of a thesis
or dissertation on a topic of the student's choosing. Recent M.A.
theses and dissertation titles attest to the interdisciplinary nature
and diversity of studies on L2 acquisition here at South Carolina (see
the Alumni page ). The diversity
of topics reflect in part the range of interests and expertise of our
faculty, as can be seen below.
Students
graduating from our M.A. Program with a specialization in L2 studies
have obtained jobs teaching either English as a second language or
foreign languages to speakers of English in public and private schools,
both here in the United States and abroad. Our doctoral graduates
have mainly gone to academic positions in second language acquisition.
Faculty having Second Language
Acquisition/Teaching as an area of interest:
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Visiting Assistant Professor (Languages,
Literatures, and Cultures; German)
Ph.D., University of Texas, Austin, 2003
Sociocultural Theory, discourse analysis,
computer-mediated communication, Mikhail Bakhtin. |
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Annie
Duménil
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Assistant Professor (French &
Classics)
Ph.D., University of South Carolina, 1983
French linguistics, language teaching. |
D.
Eric Holt
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Associate Professor
(Languages, Literatures, and Cultures; Spanish)
Ph.D., Georgetown University, 1997
Spanish
linguisitcs; acquisition of phonology.
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Lara Lomicka
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Assistant Professor (French & Classics)
Ph.D., Pennsylvania State University, 2001
Foreign language acquisition theory, research, and
pedagogy. |
| Alexandra Rowe |
Director of English
Programs for Internationals
Ph.D., University of South Carolina, 1990
L2 writing, EPI administration.
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Graduate Courses in Second Language
Acquisition and ESL:
LING 790 Second Language
Acquisition (3)
Study of current theory and research in second language acquisition and
exploration of relationships between such work and classroom second
language learning and teaching. Examination of research techniques used
in applied linguistics.
LING 791 Theory and
Methodology in Second Language Acquisition (3)
(Prereq: LING 600, 790) Current issues and research in adult
second language acquisition, with special attention to developments in
theory and to methodological issues and considerations.
LING 795 Teaching English as a Foreign Language (3)
(Prereq: LING 600) Problems in learning and teaching English
pronunciation, word morphology, syntax, and vocabulary including
supervised practice in tutoring non-native speakers of English.
LING 798 Practicum in TEFL (3)
(Prereq: LING 600, 795) Observation and supervised teaching of
English as a foreign language in an individually designed classroom
setting. May not be taken by M.A. or Ph.D. students as part of their
required courses.
LING 890 Seminar in
Language Acquisition (3)
(Prereq: consent of instructor) Special topics in the acquisition
of language such as first language acquisition of English or other
languages, cross-linguistic effects on acquisition, or issues in
acquisition theory.
LING 891
Seminar in English as a Second Language (3)
(Prereq: consent of instructor) Special topics in teaching
English as a second language such as materials design, program design
and evaluation, or teaching a particular language skill.
Current activities at USC
relating to Second Language Acquisition and ESL:
Second Language Research Group (SLARG)
Sociolinguistics and Linguistic
Anthropology
Sociolinguistics describes and seeks to
explain variation in choices between languages, dialects, or
styles/registers, and the association of these choices with speakers'
social group memberships, as well as with situational features (e.g.
topic, interaction type). Researchers also study how speakers'
motivations or goals are associated with their choices in interpersonal
interactions.
Discourse Analysis involves research which aims to arrive at underlying
principles of how grammatical structures and lexical features are
organized above the sentence level. It considers especially the
relationship between choice of certain formal structures and pragmatic
intent.
Language
Contact is an area of linguistics that seeks to describe and arrive at
explanatory generalizations about the effects of contact on linguistic
systems when their speakers speak more than one language.
Research in language contact includes the study of borrowing,
codeswitching, convergence, attrition, and development of
pidgins/creoles.
Linguistic Anthropology is a field of research in which language and
culture are considered to be inextricably intertwined. Linguistic
anthropologists view language as a form of social action, a way to
create cultural worlds, and a foundation for all cultural
practices. Naturally occurring conversations, written texts, and
oral texts are analyzed with reference to their social contexts.
Texts and contexts are treated as inseparable.
Faculty having Sociolinguistics
and/or Linguistic Anthropology as an area of interest:
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Anne Bezuidenhout
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Associate Professor
(Philosophy)
Ph.D., University of Michigan, 1990
Philosophy of language, pragmatics, relevance
theory. |
Elaine Chun |
Assistant Professor
(English)
Ph.D., University
of Texas at Austin, 2007
Sociolinguistics,
stylization, language and race, class, and gender, Asian American and
multiethnic communities in the U.S. |
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Janina
Fenigsen
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Assistant Professor (Anthropology)
Ph.D., Brandeis University, 2000
Linguistic anthropology, political economy of
language, linguistic ideologies, and creole languages. |
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Instructor (Languages, Literatures,
and Cultures; Russian)
Ph.D., University of Noth Carolina, 2001
Slavic
linguistics; sociolinguistics, language standardization, language birth
and death ; use of new technologies in
language instruction.
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Tracey
Weldon
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Assistant Professor (English)
Ph.D., The Ohio State University, 1998
Sociolinguistics, morpho-syntactic variation. |
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Assistant Professor (Germanic, Slavic, & East
Asian Languages)
Ph.D., University of Texas, Austin, 1996
Sociolinguistics, pragmatics, applied linguistics,
Japanese. |
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Visiting Assistant Professor (Languages,
Literatures, and Cultures; German)
Ph.D., University of Texas, Austin, 2003
Sociocultural Theory, discourse analysis,
computer-mediated communication, Mikhail Bakhtin. |
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Jennifer F. Reynolds
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Assistant Professor (Anthropology)
Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles, 2002
Linguistic anthropology, The
Anthropology/Sociology of Childhood, Political Economy of Languages |
Graduate Courses in Sociolinguistics
and Linguistic Anthropology:
LING 541
Language and Gender [=
ANTH 555, WOST 541] (3)
Approaches to gender and language emphasizing the social grounding of
both; how language reflects sociocultural values and as a tool for
constructing different types of social organization.
LING 565 Philosophy of Language
[= PHIL 517] (3)
(Prereq: PHIL 202 or consent of instructor) An examination of
concepts and problems such as meaning, reference, analyticity,
definition, and the relation between logic and philosophy.
LING 740
Introduction to Sociolinguistics (3)
(Prereq or coreq: LING 600) An examination of choices speakers in
the same community make between styles, dialects, and languages; their
association with social group memberships; speakers' perceptions of
interpersonal relationships.
LING 742 Analysis of
Conversation [= ANTH 756] (3)
Types of interactive organization found within conversation and the
methods and procedures used by participants to achieve order.
LING 744 Language Contact
Phenomena(3)
(Prereq: LING 600) The structural effects of contact between
speakers of more than one language on the language involved. Borrowing,
code-switching, convergence, language death, development of pidgins and
creoles.
LING 745 Varieties of American
English [= ENGL 782] (3)
Social and regional variation in American English since the colonial
period.
LING 747 Language as Social Action
[= ANTH 757] (3)
Examines language as a social, cultural, and political matrix.
Topics include ideology, gender, race, power, agency, and resistance.
Students will apply linguistic theories in their own analyses of
everyday speech.
LING 765 Studies in Philosophy of
Language [= PHIL 718] (3)
An examination of concepts and problems such as meaning, reference,
analyticity, and translational indeterminacy; evaluation of accounts of
speech acts, the semantics of propositional attitudes, and metaphor and
other pragmatic phenomena.
LING 780 Discourse Analysis
(3) (Prereq: LING 600)
Underlying principles of how phonological, syntactic, and lexical
features are organized above the sentence level; alternative choices of
these features and how they contribute to the speaker's/writer's goals.
LING 781 Stylistics [=
ENGL 788] (3)
Linguistic Analysis of literary texts. Linguistic definition of style;
stylistic choices as the author's voice.
Current activities at USC relating to
Sociolinguistics, Discourse, and/or Anthropological Linguistics:
Language and Culture
Reading Group (LangCult)
Phonetics and Phonological Theory
Faculty having Phonetics and/or
Phonological Theory as an area of interest:
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Kurt Goblirsch
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Associate Professor (Germanic,
Slavic, & East Asian Languages)
Ph.D.,University of Minnesota, 1990
Comparative Germanic linguistics, historical
phonology, dialectology. |
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Assistant Professor (Spanish, Italian, and
Portuguese)
Ph.D., Georgetown University, 1997
Phonology, historical linguistics, dialectology. |
Graduate Courses in Phonetics and/or
Phonological Theory:
LING 514
Contrastive English-Spanish Phonetics and Phonology [= SPAN 517] (3)
Introduction to the study of phonetics and phonology and their
application to the sounds and sound systems of English and Spanish.
Includes transcription practice and discussion of relevance to
teaching.
LING 610 Introduction to Phonology (3)
(Prereq: LING 600) The phonetic basis of phonology; phonological
structure; lexical representation; cross-linguistic survey of major
types of phonological processes; emphasis on data analysis.
LING 712 Phonological Theory
(3)
(Prereq: LlNG 600, 710) Advanced study of theoretical issues in
phonology.
LING 715 Applied English
Phonetics (3)
Introduction to English phonetics. Basic concepts of
acoustic phonetics, properties of English speech sounds, and their
acoustic variability in varying types of linguistic context.
Includes laboratory component.
Psycholinguistics and Language Cognition
Faculty having Psycholinguistics and
Language Cognition as an area of interest:
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Amit Almor
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Assistant Professor (Psychology)
Ph.D., Brown University, 1995
Psycholinguistics and neurolinguistics, human
reasoning. |
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Anne Bezuidenhout
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Associate Professor
(Philosophy)
Ph.D., University of Michigan, 1990
Philosophy of language, pragmatics, relevance
theory. |
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Stanley Dubinsky
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Associate Professor (English)
Ph.D., Cornell University, 1985
Linguistic theory, syntax, semantics. |
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Robin
Morris
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Associate Professor (Psychology)
Ph.D., University of Massachusetts, 1990
Language processing in reading, especially word
recognition and lexical access issues. |
Graduate Courses in Psycholinguistics
and Language Cognition:
LING 565 Philosophy of Language [= PHIL 517]
(3) (Prereq: PHIL 202 or consent of instructor)
An examination of concepts and problems such as meaning, reference,
analyticity, definition, and the relation between logic and philosophy.
LING 567 Psychology of Language [= PSYC 506]
(3) (Prereq: consent of instructor)
Theories of speech perception, linguistic theories of syntax and
semantics, the brain mechanisms underlying language, the development of
language in children, and the role of language in thought.
LING 570 Introduction to Language Development
[= SPAD 570] (3) (Prereq: consent of instructor)
The language acquisition process in normal children, including the
development of semantics, morphology, syntax, phonology, and
pragmatics; American dialects and bilingualism.
LING 765 Studies in Philosophy of Language [=
PHIL 718] (3)
An examination of concepts and problems such as meaning, reference,
analyticity, and translational indeterminacy; evaluation of accounts of
speech acts, the semantics of propositional attitudes, and metaphor and
other pragmatic phenomena.
Syntax and Semantics
Faculty having Syntax and/or
Semantics as an area of interest:
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Anne Bezuidenhout
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Associate Professor
(Philosophy)
Ph.D., University of Michigan, 1990
Philosophy of language, pragmatics, relevance
theory. |
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Stanley Dubinsky
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Associate Professor (English)
Ph.D., Cornell University, 1985
Linguistic theory, syntax, semantics. |
Graduate Courses in Syntax and/or
Semantics:
LING 620
Introduction to Syntax (3)
(Prereq: LING 600) Foundations of generative grammar, focusing on
the syntax of English; universal principles of basic clause structure
and derived constructions; emphasis on syntactic argumentation and
cross-linguistic generalization.
LING 721
Syntactic Theory
(3)
(Prereq: LlNG 600, 720) Advanced exploration of a principled
model of the syntactic component of universal grammar and the interface
between this module and semantic interpretations and lexical
information. Competing hypotheses are compared.
LING 725 Applied English Syntax
[= ENGL 783] (3)
Practical survey of the syntactic structures of English; usage, social
and regional variation; emphasis on data.
LING 727 Semantics (3)
(Prereq: LlNG 600) Traditional and structural approaches to
semantics; feasibility of using a semantics-based generative model to
account for morphological and syntactic arrangements.
LING 728 Formal Semantics
(3)
(Prereq: LING 600) The formal study of linguistic meaning:
includes set theory, propositional and predicate calculus,
quantification, meaning and reference, the pragmatics of speech acts,
and word meaning.
LING 765 Studies in Philosophy of
Language [= PHIL 718] (3)
An examination of concepts and problems such as meaning, reference,
analyticity, and translational indeterminacy; evaluation of accounts of
speech acts, the semantics of propositional attitudes, and metaphor and
other pragmatic phenomena.
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