122221 SE Linguistics Seminar / BA Paper (2021S)
Scots
Continuous assessment of course work
Labels
REMOTE
Registration/Deregistration
Note: The time of your registration within the registration period has no effect on the allocation of places (no first come, first served).
- Registration is open from Th 18.02.2021 00:00 to Th 25.02.2021 12:00
- Deregistration possible until We 31.03.2021 23:59
Details
max. 18 participants
Language: English
Lecturers
Classes
Vorläufig online
Freitag 14:15-15:45
Beginn: 19.03.2021
Information
Aims, contents and method of the course
Assessment and permitted materials
The seminar will look at each topic in depth, using real data, and will be based around extensive weekly homework analysis. These exercises will engage you with Scots as well as prepare you for your choice of topic and its treatment in the BA assignment.
Minimum requirements and assessment criteria
Examination topics
3 presentations (with written material) each worth 15% each
plus
BA assignment arising from one of them worth 55%
plus
BA assignment arising from one of them worth 55%
Reading list
The set books will be _The Edinburgh Companion to Scots_, edited by John Corbett, J. Derrick McClure & Jane Stuart-Smith (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2003),
and
Robert McColl Millar, _Modern Scots: An Analytical Survey_ (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2018).
Further reading will be recommended topic by topic. There will be regular home work.
and
Robert McColl Millar, _Modern Scots: An Analytical Survey_ (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2018).
Further reading will be recommended topic by topic. There will be regular home work.
Association in the course directory
Studium: BA 612
Code/Modul: BA06.2
Lehrinhalt: 12-2222
Code/Modul: BA06.2
Lehrinhalt: 12-2222
Last modified: We 21.04.2021 11:26
Thus the status of Scots throughout its development and right up to the present day will be a recurrent theme of this seminar. As evidence for its status, a great many literary and also non-literary texts as well as corpora and online material will be used. An abiding theme will be the identification of the languageness or dialecticity of Scots.
The seminar will comprise three parts:
1. The morpho-syntax and discourse-pragmatics of Scots/Scottish English. This will be studied by using a range of recent dramatic texts. Each student will be allocated a particular play, in an electronic version. In one class, students will read aloud excerpts from their play, to get an initial feeling for spoken Scots.
2. The lexis of traditional spoken Scots. This will be studied on the basis of the data used for individual thematic maps which were published in _The Linguistic Atlas of Scotland_.
3. The tradition of poetry of Scots. This will be studied on the basis of well-known poems in Scots from different periods from the medieval period to the present day.