LANGUAGE AND TRANSLATION - ENGLISH II
cod. 15028

Academic year 2008/09
2° year of course - First semester
Professor
Academic discipline
Lingua e traduzione - lingua inglese (L-LIN/12)
Field
Discipline delle lingue e traduzioni
Type of training activity
Characterising
80 hours
of face-to-face activities
10 credits
hub:
course unit
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Learning objectives

<br />
The main objectives of the course are to:<br />
study media language<br />
compare and analyze the various forms of interaction (newspapers, radio and TV news, chat shows, talk shows, Internet, British sitcoms;<br />
analyse the identity of participants that emerges according to lexical and syntactic choices, discourse features as well as the text type.

Prerequisites

Students should have already reached Level B2 (Common European Framework of Reference).

Course unit content

<p><br />
Title of course: Identity in Media Language</p>
<p>Starting from the numerous forms of generating information in media discourse (newsgiornali, radio, televisione, Internet) and concluding with forms of entertainment (chat shows, sitcom), the course will focus on the emerging identity of the participants in each speech event. Particular attention will be paid in communicative terms to the relationship between writer and reader, interviewer and interviewee, actor and TV audience that emerges between the lines of spoken exchanges, also the public and private face of celebrities, common shared knowlege that comes into play for the understanding of the pragmatic function of each, and so forth. <br />
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The students will also follow a seminar on the theory and practice of translation.<br />
<br />
Students must attend lessons with the language assistants on the development of the various language skills in both semesters. </p>
<p>They must also complete an individual self-study programme of at least 10 hours in the multimedia laboratory. </p>

Full programme

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Bibliography

Mansfield G. 2006 Changing Channels - Media Language in (Inter) Action, Milano: LED <br />
Mansfield G. 2006 “Small world? – proximity, identity and relevance in local news reporting”, in La Torre di Babele, rivista del Dipartimento di Lingue e Letterature Straniere di Parma, n. 3/2006. Parma: Monte Università Parma. <br />
O’Keefe, A. 2006 Investigating Media Discourse. Routledge <br />
Sacks, H., Schegloff, E. & Jefferson G. 1974.” A simplest systematics for the organisation of turn-taking in conversation”. Language 50, 696-735. <br />
Kelly-Holmes, Advertising as Multilingual Communication, ch. 2. <br />
Clayman S. & Heritage J. 2002. The News Interview. C.U.P. (chapters 1, 3,4). <br />
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Non-attenders must also choose two of the following texts in addition to the above.<br />
Choose two of the following texts in addition to the above reading list: <br />
Bell, A. & Garrett P.(ed), 1998. Approaches to Media Discourse. Blackwell. <br />
Boyd, A. 2001. Broadcast journalism – Techniques of radio and television news. <br />
Oxford: Focal Press (fifth edition). <br />
Fleming, C. 2002. The Radio Handbook, Routledge. <br />
Haarman Louann, 1999. Aspects of Language in Television News, CLUEB. <br />
Hartley, J. 1982. Understanding News, Routledge. <br />

Teaching methods

<br />
<br />
Lectures have a theoretical input in order to leave the student time and space to put into practice the analytical tools that will be provided during the course.<br />
Classes with language assistants develop practical competence in all language skills.<br />
Students take a preliminary written examination in all the language skills at level B2+ of the Common European Framework of Reference, which they must pass in order to be able to proceed to the oral exam. The oral examination tests a knowledge of the various kinds of media covered during the course as well as an analysis of a selection of spoken and written texts.

Assessment methods and criteria

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Other information

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