Duration
30h Th
Number of credits
Lecturer
Language(s) of instruction
French language
Organisation and examination
Teaching in the first semester, review in January
Schedule
Units courses prerequisite and corequisite
Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program
Learning unit contents
This course is a synthetic and problem-oriented presentation of the main analytical tools that rhetoric and semiology can offer us. These two disciplines are focused on the operation of meaning in human discourse, verbal or nonverbal (we will concentrate on verbal discourse in this class, but the development of other systems of signification will be mentioned). We will describe different levels on which meaning is constructed, from the most basic unit, the sign, on up to more complex groupings, entire discourses delivered in particular interactive contexts, with a focus on the argumentative practices and the notion of "figure".
This conceptual progression will be structured in 4 steps:
- What is a sign?
- How to describe a system of signs?
- What is an argument?
- How to describe argumentative practices?
This conceptual progression constitutes the backbone of the course. It will be accompanied by a historical progression, focusing on rhetoric first, on semiotics then. Each of these two stories will be told with stops on two major conceptual systems: Aristotle's for rhetoric, Saussure's for semiotic. Case studies will put the tools mentioned at the outset to a test, that of concrete discourse.
Learning outcomes of the learning unit
By the end of the course, students should be able to:
a) recognise the main historical stages in the evolution of rhetorics and semiotics;
b) define the main concepts of rhetoric and semiotic analysis and understand the relations between them;
c) use these concepts to describe and analyse simple signs systems and discourses;
d) provide specific examples of general rhetoric or semiotic phenomena.
Prerequisite knowledge and skills
Good oral and written command of French.
Planned learning activities and teaching methods
The course is organised as followed:
- students read the syllabus;
- they prepare questions that could be used for the examination;
- we answer together the questions during the sessions.
Mode of delivery (face to face, distance learning, hybrid learning)
Face-to-face, on a volontary basis (see above).
Organisational adjustments related to the current health context
Recommended or required readings
A syllabus is proposed as the course goes by. It provides a bibliography, to which students can refer to complete their notes or study a subject in greater detail.
Assessment methods and criteria
Below you will find information on the evaluation methods planned for in-person and remote exams as well as those planned for hybrid sessions. Depending on how the health crisis evolves, the chosen method will be communicated to you no later than one month before the start of the exam session.
Any session :
- In-person
written exam ( open-ended questions )
- Remote
written exam
- If evaluation in "hybrid"
preferred in-person
Additional information:
A single written exam, during the January session.
The exam will be made up of a section of closed questions and a section of open questions, which will test three types of knowledge/know-how: a) encyclopaedic knowledge concerning the history of rhetoric and semiotics; b) the understanding of concepts covered in class; c) skills in rhetorical/semiotic analysis.
Criteria :
- the relevance and accuracy of the answer ;
- the care in formulation ;
- synthesis capacity and articulation of ideas ;
- the spelling of names and concepts presented in class.
Work placement(s)
Organizational remarks
The course will take place on Fridays (1st Term only), 11AM to 1PM, classroom Kurth. Resumption : Friday, 25/09/2020, 11AM.
Contacts
Teacher
François PROVENZANO, Professor
Département de Langues et littératures françaises et romanes
Service de Sciences du langage et rhétorique
Place Cockerill, 3-5, bât. A2, 4000 Liège.
Tél. 04 366 56 45
Mail : Francois.Provenzano@ulg.ac.be
Surgery hours: Wednesdays, from 9.30 to 11, office A2/4/4
Secretary
Ariane Nusgens : 04 366 56 50