Linguistic Program Graduate Courses
The following courses are offered by the Linguistics
Program. Because this is an interdisciplinary program, many courses
are cross-listed in other departments. Some courses that are not
cross-listed with Linguistics may be used for credit, and a partial
listing of non-linguistics courses of interest to linguistics graduate
students is found at the bottom of this page.
Titles of upcoming courses are displayed in
blue (Fall 2007) together with their days and times.
If you would like a detailed description of the course, go to: Fall
2007 course descriptions. If you would like to go ahead and
register for classes, click here.
LING 502 French
Linguistics [= FREN 517] (3) (Prereq: FREN
515)
The structure, morphology, and syntax of modern French.
LING 503
Introduction to German Linguistics [= GERM 515]
(3) (Prereq: consent of instructor)
Structural and descriptive linguistics applied to the German Language.
LING 504
Introduction to Spanish Linguistics [= SPAN 515]
(3)
Phonology, morphology, and syntax of modern Spanish.
LING 505 Interdisciplinary
Topics in Linguistics (3)
Topics selected by the instructor for specialized study. Course
content varies and will be announced in the schedule of classes
by suffix and title. May be repeated with different suffix.
LING 505P / PSYC 598: Psychology
of Reading
Section 1 TTh 12:30-4:45 (Instructor: Morris)
LING 505R / RUSS 598G: Structure of
Russian
Section 1 MWF 12:20-1:10 (Instructor: Ford)
LING 512
French Phonology [= FREN 516] (3)
The sound system and its functioning in the morphological system
of French from the point of view of current 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 530 Language
Change (3)
Major ways in which phonetics, phonology, syntax, morphology, and
semantics change through language history; social factors which
promote innovation.
LING 540
Language and Culture (3)
Introduction to sociolinguistic issues, focusing on a single language.
Course content varies and will be announced in the schedule of classes
by suffix and title. May be repeated as topics vary for six credits.
LING
541 Language and
Gender [=
ANTH 555, WOST 555] (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 542 Language and
Colonialism (3)
Anthropological approach to issues of language and colonialism in
comparative perspective. Linguistic consequences of colonialism
under consideration include communicative patterns, linguistic change,
and linguistic choices of post-colonial writers.
LING 543 Discourse,
Gender, and the Politics of Emotion (3)
Anthropological approach to issues of discourse, gender and emotion.
Issues under consideration include the social control, force, and
forms of emotional discourse, and the relationship between emotion
and culture from gender-oriented perspective.
LING 565
Philosophy of Language [= PHIL 517] (3) (Prereq: PHIL
202 or consent of instructor)
Section 1 MW 3:30-4:45 (Instructor: Bezuidenhout)
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 [=
COMD 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 600 Survey
of Linguistics [= ENGL 680] (3)
Major approaches to language study and linguistics related to other
disciplines; required as first course for any program of study in
linguistics.
LING 610 Introduction
to Phonology (3) (Prereq: LING 300, 301, or 600)
The phonetic basis of phonology; phonological structure; lexical
representation; cross-linguistic survey of major types of phonological
processes; emphasis on data analysis.
LING 620
Introduction to Syntax (3) (Prereq: LING 300, 301,
or 600)
Section 1 M 11:45-2:15 (Instructor: Marrano)
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 627 Introduction to Semantics.
(3) (Prereq: LING 300, 301, or 600) Introduction to the study of
linguistic meaning, including the following topics: meaning, reference,
and truth; the connections among language, thought, and reality;
word meaning and sentence meaning; possible worlds and modality;
thematic roles; meaning and context; presupposition and implicature;
speech acts; formal semantics; and cognitive semantics.
LING 650 Introduction to Morphology.
(3) (Prereq: LING 300, 301, or 600) Foundations of generative morphology,
focusing on morphological data collection and analysis; the structure
of the lexicon; and the interfaces between morphology and phonology,
semantics, and syntax.
LING 698 Practicum
in Teaching ESOL (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 711 Phonological
Theory (3) (Prereq: LlNG 600, 610)
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.
LING 721
Syntactic Theory
(3) (Prereq: LlNG 600, 620)
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 728 Formal Semantics.
(3) (Prereq: LING 600 or 627) The formal study of linguistic meaning,
including the following topics: Fregean truth-conditional semantics;
lexical decomposition; predication, modification, and definite descriptions;
generalized quantification; intentional and extensional contexts;
tense, aspect, and modality; propositional attitudes; and indexicality,
deixis, presupposition, speech acts, and implicature.
LING 730
Historical Linguistics (3) (Prereq: LING 600, 610)
Section 1 TTh 3:30-4:45 (Instructor: Disterheft)
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 705] (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.
LING 739 History and
Methodology of Linguistics (3) (Prereq: LING 600, 610,
620)
Introduces basic resources of the discipline and focuses on the
development of linguistics in terms of dominant issues and analytical
methodology with emphasis on "paradigm shifts."
LING 740
Introduction to Sociolinguistics (3)
(Prereq or coreq: LING 600)
Section 1 TTh 2:00-3:15 (Instructor: Weldon)
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.
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)
Section 1 T 5:00-7:30 pm (Instructor: Schulz)
Current issues and research in adult second language acquisition,
with special attention to developments in theory and to methodological
issues and considerations.
LING 795
Principles and Strategies for Teaching ESOL (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
796 Teaching Reading and Writing to ESOL Learners: Theory
and Practice (3)
This course surveys research on the mental processes and linguistic
contexts involved in reading and writing in a second language. Pedagogical
implications for elementary, secondary, and postsecondary learners
are discussed.
LING
797 Technology in Foreign
Language Education (3) [=
FORL 772] )
Introduction to technology in language teaching and the connection
between language acquisition and the implementation of Internet
and multimedia technologies.
LING 799 Thesis Preparation
(1-9)
LING 805 Topics
in Linguistics (3)
Topics selected by the instructor for specialized study. May be
repeated with different suffix.
LING 806 Directed Reading
and Research (3 each semester)
LING 820 Seminar
in Syntax (3) (Prereq: consent of instructor)
Advanced exploration in syntactic theory involving either cross-theoretical
examination of specific linguistic phenomena or in-depth study of
a particular theoretical model.
LING
830 Seminar
in Historical Linguistics (3) (Prereq: consent
of instructor)
Special topics in historical and comparative linguistics, such as
historical phonology or syntax; Indo-European linguistics; and comparative
Germanic or Romance linguistics.
LING
840 Seminar
in Language Variation (3) (Prereq: consent of instructor)
Current theories relevant to specialized consideration of the social
functions of linguistic choices at any level of analysis; variation
as a reflection of region and social group membership or interpersonal
relationships.
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, 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.
LING 899 Dissertation Preparation
(1-12)
Non-Linguistics Graduate Courses
of Interest to Linguistics Graduate Students
ANTH 703 Anthropological
Inquiry (3)
Section 1 TTh 12:30-1:45 (Instructor: Fenigsen)
A discussion of the general topics of anthropological inquiry, theories,
and methods.
ANTH 719
Field Problems in Ethnology (3)
Advanced graduate seminar on methods of ethnology, including research
design, field methods, and interpretation of data, and the development
of theory from data. Includes class and field sessions.
ENGL 789 Poetics
(3)
The question of meaning in poetry with special attention to linguistic
structure as the source of that meaning; also prosody and related
formal effects.
ENGL 791 Introduction to
Research/Composition Studies (3)
This course will be taught in the manner of a practicum, focusing
on research methodologies. Readings will include how to do both
qualitative and quantitative research studies, in addition to exemplary
descriptions of these kinds of studies. The major course project
will be research project, including a proposal, data collection,
and a research report. Several textbooks will be available at the
South Carolina Bookstore, and selected articles will be copied.
There will be no exams; grades will come from extensive informal
writing (such as reading response journals) and a formal report
on the research project.
GERM
710 Middle
High German (3)
A study of Middle High German language and literature with special
emphasis on lyric and epic poetry of the late 12th and early 13th
centuries.
PSYC 820 Seminar
in Developmental Psychology (3)
Theoretical and empirical issues in an area of current interest
in developmental psychology. May be repeated with different topics.
PSYC 822 Seminar
in Cognitive Psychology (3)
Theoretical and empirical issues in an area of current interest
in cognitive psychology. May be repeated with different topics.
|