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Studies in English, week 7: November 9th, 2012

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Homework:

  1. Continue to research your topic
    1. what did you find out about your topic this week (Nov. 9th – Nov. 15th)?
    2. Write a short report on your blog (or on this blog if you cannot access your own blog)
      1. What did you find out?
      2. Where did you look (be specific 具体的に)?
      3. deadline is Thursday midnight (23:59).

Today’s class:

  1. Presentation #1 by most people in the class. If you did not present today, you can present next week (last chance).
  2. Mini-lectures on
    1. pragmatics (Grice‘s four maxims; speech acts, direct and indirect; discourse analysis; adjacency pairs) and read about Grice on Japanese Wikipedia.
    2. language acquisition.
      1. One way researchers can study how human beings learn to speak a language is by studying people who did NOT learn to speak a language. There have been a few documented cases of children growing up without learning to speak. What happened? What was missing in their environment or in their brain?
      2. One famous case is that of Kaspar Hauser (a movie was made about this: see below).
      3. Another famous (but fictional) case is that of Mowgli, the boy brought up by wolves, who is the main character in a book by 19th-century British Nobel Prize winning author Rudyard Kipling (who also wrote “How the Alphabet was Made” and “How the First Letter was Written“) – The Jungle Book (click the link to read the Wikipedia entry). Mowgli grows up speaking wolf language but learns human language later on. Could this be possible, knowing what we know now about human language-learning?
      4. Another famous but fictional case is that of Tarzan, a young boy whose parents die in the African jungle and who is brought up by apes. 89 Tarzan movies have been made as well as TV dramas, but the books are much better than any of them.  Tarzan grows up speaking ape-language but learns human language later on. Could this be possible, knowing what we know now about human language-learning?
      5. Yet another fictional example of a feral child is Peter Pan.
      6. (Personal note: I saw the Jungle Book movie when I was a child, and I still remember all the songs. My mother read me the Jungle Book when I was very young. She read it to me in her native language – French. Later, I read the stories in English, and later still, I read them again in French, so I have a strong personal connection with these stories. They are also very famous and well known in Britain and other English-speaking countries. I also read the Tarzan stories when I was a teenager. I think I collected the entire set.)
      7. Children who have grown up with very little human contact are called feral children (click the link to read the Wikipedia entry on this).
    3. do men and women speak differently all around the world?
  3. Freewriting: about your own presentation and your classmates’, and today’s mini-lectures, plus anything else you want to say.

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Cover of Siobhan Chapman's book on Paul Grice, philosopher and linguist
Paul Grice, 1913 – 1988

Continue reading Studies in English, week 7: November 9th, 2012

Studies in English 1, week 8: June 8th, 2012

Today’s report is by Ms. Ebisutani.

Today,

  1. We thought about differences of “Langue” and “Parole”, and Saussure’s chess metaphor.
  2. We read chapter3, the sections about “Twentieth Century: Daniel Jones and the Phoneme”, “Twentieth Century: Bloomfield and the Americans” and “Chomsky”.
  3. We summarized chapter3, “The Study of Language: Greeks to the 20th Century”.

 

Homework

  1. Choose a topic for your presentation (June 29th).
  2. Write a Japanese grammatically impossible sentence (see today’s handout, chapter 4, for an example in English: ‘Quickly table green under happy’.)
  3. Write a Japanese sentence that has never been spoken or written before (see today’s handout, chapter 4, for an example in English: ‘Purple elephants are turning somersaults
    in the hall’.)

Presentation topics. Read one of these books (or a chapter in a book) and tell the class about it.

  • Presentation date: June 29th
  • Time: 2 minutes.
Neal Stephenson speaking at Google,
Neal Stephenson speaking at Google, (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
  1. Daniel Pinker’s “The Language Instinct
  2. 1984 by George Orwell
  3. How the Alphabet was Made, by Rudyard Kipling
  4. How the First Letter was Written, by Rudyard Kipling
  5. Snow Crash“, a science-fiction novel about language, refers to history and the Biblical story of the Tower of Babel. By Neal Stephenson.
  6. Japanese myths or famous stories about how language began
  7. A famous and/or influential Japanese book about (Japanese or English) linguistics

Or you could introduce a famous Japanese linguist or linguistics expert, either living or dead.

  1. A famous Japanese linguist or linguistics expert (either living or dead)
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