Welcome
Welcome to Levels of Linguistic Analysis II: Metaphor! On this page, I will condense all presentation materials, summaries of our classes, and also the weekly homework assignments.
To get started, you can find the syllabus below with everything important accessible via links. Each homework assignment is to be prepared for the following week (#1 for week 2 …). I also discuss the design of the course under workflow.
You can download this page as html ctrl+s
and view it in your Browser offline in case you don’t have internet connection.
If you really need a print of individual sections, this website is fairly well optimized for printing via your browser’s print option ctrl+p
.
Syllabus
Date | Topic | Main Reading(s) | Homework1 |
---|---|---|---|
17.04. | 1 Introduction | #1 | |
24.04. | 2 Semantics 1 | Schmid (1996); Stefanowitsch (2020) ch. 1-2 | #2 |
01.05. | 3 Semantics 2 | Justeson & Katz (1991); Stefanowitsch (2020) ch. 3 | #3 |
08.05. | 4 Morphology 1 | Kaunisto (1999) | #4 |
15.05. | 5 Morphology 2 | Plag, Dalton-Puffer & Baayen (1999) | #5 |
22.05. | 6 Syntax 1 | Kennedy (2003) | #6 |
29.05. | 7 Syntax 2 | Newman & Rice (2007) | #7 |
05.06. | 8 Constructions | Stefanowitsch & Gries (2009) | #8 |
12.06. | 9 Conceptual Metaphor | Stefanowitsch (2005) | #9 |
19.06. | 10 Metonymy | Deignan (2005) | #10 |
26.06. | 11 Metaphor and Grammar | Deignan (2006) | #11 |
03.07. | 12 Color | Kay & Maffi (1999) | #12 |
10.07. | 13 Project Day 1 | #13 | |
17.07. | 14 Project Day 2 | #14 |
Contact
- Alexander Rauhut
- Email: alexander.rauhut@fu-berlin.de
- Office Hours: Mondays 9–10 at JK29/223, or email me for an online appointment: WebEx
Links
- Campus Management: Enrolment, Grades
- Primo: FU Online library
- Oxford English Dictionary: Full access via VPN
Corpus-related
-
StructEng Wiki: A wiki all about (corpus) liguistics written by my colleagues and me.
- CQP-Tutorial: comprehensive documentation of CQP featurens with examples
- CQP-Cheatsheet: NOTE! setup section is not up to date anymore
- Collocations: Everything you ever wanted to know and more about measuring collocations
- OPUS: Open parallel corpus — A selection of parallel corpora for comparing languages
… to be continued
Course Requirements
- Enrollment on Campus Management (CM)
- successfully participated in an introductory class to linguistics
A basic grasp of linguistic concepts and a basic knowledge of linguistic terminology is required. If this is the first linguistics seminar for your, please contact me.
- Regular participation: Stay in touch, do homework, participate in group activity.
- Lecture course: regular and active participation is also required in the lecture course Levels of Linguistic Analysis I. It is not offered this semester, so ideally you take it in winter.
The lecture is going to provide you with the necessary methodological and theoretical knowledge. I will assume the contents of the lecture to be familiar to you.
Weekly workflow
These are basic components of our seminar:
- Preparation
- Read the paper of the week
- Class
- My weekly presentations
- Interactive and group exercises
- Follow up
- Do Homework
- Read Follow-ups
I. This Website
This website is going to be the main hub for information. It will essentially replace most PDF materials you are familiar with from regular semesters, such as presentation slides. You will find all course information, the syllabus, bibliography, and tips and tricks, which you can easily navigate with the sidebar.
All homework will be published here. I’d recommend you bookmark the syllabus, because everything that is relevant weekly is linked from there.
The main sections will replace presentation slides. They will be written in the form of short articles that pick up some major points that came up during class. They also might go a bit deeper into certain subjects.
My aim is to make the experience as integrated as possible and tell the story of our class in a coherent way throughout the semesters. Inform me about broken or misdirected links. :)
II. Self-study
There is a preparatory reading every week. I will build on it, and assume that you are familiar with it. Reading academic literature is one of the major corner stones of this (and most other) seminars. Most of the times, there will also be a special homework task posted here.
In fact, the bulk of the work, you have to do by yourself. This is nothing special about an online semester. If you look up what an ECTS credit represents, you will find that it is work load measured in time. If you then subtract the little time we use during live sessions, you’ll realize how much time is left for you to prepare for every week, study the readings, discover your own further readings, do research for your own project, or practice. Ideally, you should have read even more than just the recommended literature by the end of the seminar. Reality check if you find yourself skipping entire readings or procrastinating homework assignments.
III. Tutorial
We are offering a tutorial in which you will practice some basics in academic writing, and most importantly, practice the methodological skills you learn in this course. Our tutors will also be open for any questions you are too shy to ask me ;). I highly recommend that you participate regularly. The most difficult thing for most people at the end is to find ideas for their own research. If you participate actively in both this course and the tutorial, there is almost no way you won’t be able to finish this class successfully.