The United States has a vast and varied linguistic landscape that has been shaped by a unique medley of peoples and cultural practices. From the colonization of North America to contemporary politics and popular culture, language has helped to connect us in many ways, and has also served as a tool for making and maintaining difference. This course explores issues of standardization, language maintenance, linguistic discrimination, identity formation, and many others to consider the ways "diversity" is not only a multiplicity of different histories, beliefs, and practices, but can also become a means of interpersonal prejudice and structural inequity.
Term: Spring 2024
Instructor: Britni Moore, Anna Romaniuk, Krystal Smalls
Credit: 3 hours
This course satisfies the General Education Criteria in Spring 2024 for:
- Cultural Studies - US Minority
- Social & Beh Sci - Soc Sci