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[ecrea] Discourse theory and analysis (intensive one-week course - prof. Veronique mottier)
Thu May 19 15:49:34 GMT 2016
DISCOURSE THEORY AND ANALYSIS:
INTENSIVE ONE-WEEK COURSE (22-26 August 2016)
Swiss Summer School in Social Science Methods 2016
Location: LUGANO (on the Swiss-Italian border)
Instructor: Prof. Véronique Mottier
Véronique Mottier is Professor in Sociology at the University of
Lausanne, and Director of Studies and Fellow in Social and Political
Sciences at Jesus College, Cambridge. She holds a Ph.D in sociology from
the University of Cambridge, and BA and MA degrees in sociology and
political science from the University of Geneva. She has taught
discourse analysis, social theory, and qualitative methodology at many
institutions, including the Essex Summer School in Social Science Data
Analysis and Collection, the European University Institute in Florence,
GIGA/Hamburg, and the Universities of Geneva and Cambridge. Her research
interests include interpretative methodologies; Foucauldian discourse &
narrative analysis; politics of sexuality and gender; modernity, 'race',
and identity politics. She has published widely in these areas, and is
currently writing a book on the history of French social theory for
Harvard University Press. For full list of publications and webpage, see:
veroniquemottier.com;
http://www.sociology.cam.ac.uk/people/academic-staff/vmottier
The teaching assistant for this course is Dr. James Clackson, who is
Reader in Comparative Philology at the University of Cambridge and an
expert in socio-linguistics and the linguistic analysis of texts.
WORKSHOP CONTENTS AND OBJECTIVES:
The aim of this workshop is to explore the practical application of
discourse theory to the analysis of textual data. There are many
different versions of discourse analysis; this course focuses
specifically on types of discourse analysis which are part of the wider
family of interpretative methodologies, and which emphasise the links
between language and power. Interpretative methodologies are grounded in
a social constructionist perspective on social life, reminding social
scientists of the constructed nature of the social 'facts' that are
studied. Against this backdrop, discourse analysis helps researchers to
explore topics such as: the constructions of meanings and identities
through which individuals, groups, or organisations make sense of their
everyday lives and interactions, and reproduce or challenge their
social, organisational and political environments; the meanings and
identities produced within policy frames, political activism, bodily
practices, interactions with healt
h or welfare professionals, or legal processes; the mechanisms of
social exclusion or inclusion within media debates or internet blogs;
the discursive reproduction or transformation of social norms around
gender, sexuality, disability, migration, racialized identities, ‘old
age’ or ‘youth’, etc.
More precisely, the workshop will (1) examine key interpretative
methodologies such as interactionnism, ethnomethodology and
hermeneutics, and examine how these perspectives translate into concrete
research questions and frameworks for ‘doing’ discourse analysis and (2)
explore the application of practical techniques of discourse analysis,
focusing especially on textual materials (which can include media or
internet materials, archival texts, personal diaries, policy and legal
texts, organisational and management documents, activist discourses,
scientific discourses, or interview transcripts).
Although the lectures, exercises and readings will also address wider
methodological issues such as researcher reflexivity and validity
concerns, the main emphasis of the workshop is on practical applications
of discourse theory and analysis through daily exercises in class.
Participants are welcome to bring their own data to the Summer School if
they wish to do so, and will have a chance to discuss and work on their
own data or their research project more generally in individual
tutorials during the week. The working language of this workshop is
English (but if your own data are in French, German, Dutch, Portuguese,
Spanish or English I can read these directly in the original so do bring
some).
PRACTICAL INFO AND SIGNING-UP:
http://www.unige.ch/ses/sococ/ss/
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