Lecture: 2 hrs/week
and
Seminar: 2 hrs/week
Methods of instruction may include, but are not limited to, the following: lecture material presented by the instructor, in person, hybrid, or online synchronously or asynchronously (including one or two guest lectures); audio-visual activities; task-based practice in pairs and small groups, presented in person, or online synchronously or asynchronously with instructor facilitation; class discussions and debates; student-generated question and answer sessions; independent study of specific topics; and field trips.
This course examines cultural and language practices and issues within the cultures of the Spanish-speaking world from an interdisciplinary perspective and within a theoretical framework. The course is divided into three parts. Part one is a basic introduction to the terms and concepts required to examine and understand critically the complexity and contradictions of culture. Part two is dedicated more specifically to the relationship between language and culture. Part three focuses on specific aspects of culture and language, each unit starting from a cultural category/concept or a cultural practice and examining it within its contexts, visual or linguistic manifestations, and along with other related cultural practices and issues.
Part 1. Basic theoretical framework:
- The nature and different definitions of culture;
- The contributions of various disciplines to the understanding of culture;
- Production and transmission of, and negotiation within culture(s);
- Culture and reality: construction and interpretation;
- Critical perspective and self-reflection;
- Cultural concepts such as: center/periphery, tradition/modernity, post modernity, appropriation, hybridity/mestizaje, high/low culture, popular culture/mass culture, identity, space, time, agency, cultural memory, representation, imaginings, accommodation, text, intertextuality, discourse, narrative, alterity, nationalism, meaning-making, hegemony.
Part 2. Language and culture:
- The Spanish language as a cultural product;
- Spanish as mother tongue and self-identity;
- The origins of Spanish, its cultural heritage, and its evolution;
- Spanish within its social contexts; language attitudes and misunderstandings; differences between Spanish and its dialects; indigenous languages; languages in competition: the survival, loss, shift or spread of Spanish and the languages that share its geographical space;
- The etymology of Spanish words; the use of expressions; language propriety; slang, the language of youth, women and men; the language of gestures;
- The differences in ways of thinking as expressed in Spanish, in English and other languages; idiomatic expressions, proverbs, metaphors and cultural values, beliefs and attitudes;
- What is lost in translation, especially, between Spanish and English;
- Sense of humour and the Spanish of jokes;
- Spanish and globalisation: borrowings into Spanish and from Spanish;
- Sense of space and time as expressed in Spanish.
Part 3. Cultural units:
Units will be built around interrelated categories, such as: sense of place, time, national identity, cultural commonality and difference, sense of self and others, sense of belief, aesthetic and social awareness. They will review cultural manifestations and traditions including written, oral, visual and audiovisual materials, such as (but not limited to):
- Paintings;
- Sculpture;
- Architecture;
- Songs;
- Films;
- Poetry;
- Short stories;
- Documentaries;
- Food;
- Fashion and luxury goods.
Upon successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- Demonstrate knowledge of pertinent cultural aspects of the Spanish-speaking world;
- Explain historical processes that have shaped the language and the diverse cultural practices within the Spanish-speaking world;
- Describe the ever-evolving nature of the Spanish language and its various dialects;
- Interact more easily and meaningfully within the various cultures that form part of the Spanish-speaking world;
- Recognize and describe the role of Spanish as a colonial language;
- Articulate basic concepts needed to examine cultural issues in general;
- Appreciate cultural practices distinct from their own;
- Display awareness of, and sensitivity to, different modes of thought and belief;
- Recognize their own points of cultural reference;
- Identify and compare cultural practices from an interdisciplinary perspective.
Assessment will be based on course objectives and will be carried out in accordance with the ºÚÁϳԹÏÍøÆØÒ»Çø¶þÇø Evaluation Policy. Instructors may use a student’s record of attendance and/or level of active participation in a course as part of the student’s graded performance. Where this occurs, expectations and grade calculations regarding class attendance and participation must be clearly defined in the Instructor Course Outline.
Evaluation may include, but need not be limited to, the following tasks: class participation, individual or group presentations on an assigned topic, research projects, mid-term exam, final exam or paper, quizzes, journals, reading reports, and discussion forums.
Sample breakdown for this course:
Journals 20%
Participation in discussion forums and/or classes 20%
Quizzes 15%
Mid-term exam 10%
Research project 20%
Final exam or paper 15%
Total 100%
No single evaluation will be worth more than 20%.
Textbooks and Materials to be Purchased by Students
- Coursepack and/or textbook
- At least one longer work, such as Isabel Allende’s The House of the Spirits or Laura Esquivel’s Like Water for Chocolate: A Novel In Monthly Installments, With Recipes, Romances and Home Remedies. Novels can be read in Spanish or English.
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