Linguistics 131/281: Sociolinguistics
Spring 2009
 Professor Mary Bucholtz
 bucholtz@linguistics.ucsb.edu

 Office hours: W 1:30-2:30, Th 2-3 p.m.
Office: 3509 South Hall 
Phone: (805) 893-5415 
Fax: (805) 893-7769
 

SPRING 2009 MEETING TIME AND LOCATION

T Th 12:30-1:45 p.m., Building 387, Room 101

TEACHING ASSISTANT

Brendan Barnwell (okb@umail.ucsb.edu)
Office hours: Th 11-12 p.m., F 12-1 p.m.
Office: South Hall 3432M

DESCRIPTION

Sociolinguistics is the study of the relationship between language and the social world. Focusing on U.S. as well as international contexts of language use, this class will examine both classic and emerging questions of sociolinguistics and the theories and methods developed to study them. You will apply course concepts to your own original research on current sociolinguistic issues. Questions we will explore include: How and why do people codeswitch? Why do languages die and what can be done to revitalize them? How do languages influence one another and how do they change over time? What role do social factors like gender, sexuality, age, class, race, and ethnicity play in language use? How do speakers change their language use in different contexts? How do people interact across cultural and linguistic boundaries? How can sociolinguistics be used to address problems of inequality and injustice around the world?

Prerequisite: Linguistics 20 or graduate standing. This course fulfills requirements in the major in Linguistics--Sociocultural Emphasis and the Sociocultural Linguistics minor.

 

University of California, Santa Barbara | College of Letters and Science | Department of Linguistics