2018-2019 / SPOL2351-1

Policy and Speech analysis

Duration

30h Th

Number of credits

 Master in political sciences : general (120 ECTS)5 crédits 
 Master in political sciences : general (120 ECTS) (en Science, Technologie et Société (STS))5 crédits 
 Extra courses intended for exchange students (Erasmus, ...)5 crédits 

Lecturer

Frédéric Claisse

Language(s) of instruction

French language

Organisation and examination

Teaching in the second semester

Schedule

Schedule online

Units courses prerequisite and corequisite

Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program

Learning unit contents

Warning !
The course will not be organised in 2018-2019. It will be held in 2019-2020 and every uneven year (2021-2022, etc.)
The course considers how methods and concepts of discourse analysis can be used as resources in political science.
Interdisciplinary par excellence, the notion of discourse has long been an object of attention for various types of research at the crossroads of human and social sciences (linguistics, cognitive sciences, sociology, psychology, political science). By making aware of the discursive dimension of political facts, the course aims to provide the sudents with a 'toolbox' for describing complex issues, using linguistic resources mobilised by actors.
Students will be confronted to a plurality of methods of analysis and interpretation, applied to political discourse (see below, "Planned learning activities").

Learning outcomes of the learning unit

The objective of the course is twofold:

  • reinforce the students' ability to analyse power issues, through the systematic and rigorous interpretation of speech forms considered as revelatory of social and political structures and representations.
  • encourage the students to adopt a reflexive attitude towards their own use of discourse as well as their methods of investigating and producing data.

Prerequisite knowledge and skills

Students are expected to have a passive command of English, which will be the language of some of the texts composing the reading portfolio.

Planned learning activities and teaching methods

The course combines three types of learning activities:

  • Introductory theoretical lectures about key concepts in discourse analysis : performativity ; implicit (presuppositions and presumptions) ; collocations, formulas and political cant ; totalitarian languages.
  • Key readings (papers, book sections) in the field of discourse analysis (applied to political phenomena), prepared by the students, then discussed in the classroom (conceptual metaphors ; argumentation ; social discourse ; Critical Discourse Analysis, etc.).
  • Practical work (in subgroups): application to a case study chosen by the students (upon the teacher's approval).
Some examples of previously proposed themes (practical work in subgroups) :
  • terrorist propaganda ;
  • neoreactionary discourse ;
  • storytelling and manipulative uses of the narrative ;
  • totalitarian languages, newspeak and political cant
  • discrimination through language and gender-neutral language issues
  • metaphors in political discourse
  • politics in a post-truth era.

Mode of delivery (face-to-face ; distance-learning)

After a series of introductory lectures, the course will consist of interactive seminars and group work.
The course requires the students' regular attendance and active participation.

Recommended or required readings

The course will be partly based on a reading portfolio (papers, book sections) in English and in French.

Assessment methods and criteria

The evaluation is based on:

  • the students' active participation and discussion in class
  • the practical group work done by the students (oral presentation and written synthesis).
As a result, there is no formal examination.
Regular and active attendance to the seminar is thus mandatory.

Work placement(s)

Organizational remarks

The course is held only every uneven year (2019-2020, 2021-2022, etc.).
It will thus be held in 2019-2020, but not during the year 2018-2019.

Contacts

Frédéric Claisse
fclaisse@ulg.ac.be