[HERITAGE-LIST] Course offering (U. of Victoria, CA): Language in First Nations - spring 2007
Scott G. McGINNIS
smcginni at UMD.EDU
Tue Apr 3 01:09:25 UTC 2007
Language in First Nations Culture
LING 186, 1.5 Units
Dates: April 30 - May 5, 9 am to 4:30 pm
Location: University of Victoria
An intensive examination of the ways in which language is embedded in the cultural heritage and social context of a selected community, with a focus on oral history, including legends, song, dance, and cultural practices, methods, and protocols, along with the impacts and implications of social change on language.
Marianne Nicholson brings to the course her own background as a Dzawada'enuxw member of the Kwakwaka'wakw First Nations of the Pacific Northwest Coast. However, the course draws students from various cultures and each participant is asked to bring the experiences of language and culture from their own background into the learning environment of the course. Ultimately, exploring the experiences from different communities will enable participants to surmise both common
denominators in language and cultural relationship as well as strategies in dealing with language and cultural revitalization.
Topics to be covered include:
* Definitions of language
* Definitions of culture
* The importance of language to culture
* Language and world view
* Language use in song, dance, art, history and geography
* Natural language shift vs. radical language change
* Possible results on a culture when it experiences radical language shift over a relatively short period of time
* Historical and contemporary states of First Nations languages and cultures
* Language, politics and power
* First Nations cultural and linguistic revitalization at the turn of the twenty-first century
* Realistic strategies for success in First Nations linguistic and cultural revitalization
Instructor
Marianne Nicolson is a member of the Dzawada'enuxw Tribe of the Kwakwaka'wakw First Nations who reside on the coastal mainland of British Columbia. She holds a BFA from Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design and a MFA in Visual Art from the University of Victoria. As an artist her work has been shown both nationally and internationally at venues such as the National Indian Art Centre, the Taipei Fine Arts Museum, the Jordan National Gallery, the Vancouver Art Gallery and the
Art Gallery of Greater Victoria.
Most recently, she opened a solo exhibition at Artspeak Gallery in Vancouver B.C. in January 2006. Her artworks are contemporary expressions of traditional Kwakwaka'wakw concepts. Due to an emerging belief that these concepts could be better understood through comprehension of the Kwak'wala language and a growing concern over the endangered status of this indigenous language she engaged in linguistic and anthropological study at the University of Victoria where she
completed an Interdisciplinary MA in 2005.
Currently she is engaged in PhD research involving the conceptualization of space and time in Kwakwaka'wakw language and art and the importance of indigenous language to indigenous worldview.
For more information contact:
Lisa Mort-Putland
Cultural Management Programs
Division of Continuing Studies
University of Victoria
PO Box 3030 STN CSC
Victoria, BC V8W 3N6 Canada
250-721-6119
http://www.continuingstudies.uvic.ca/calr/courses-electives.aspx
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