Course Description
Narrative-making is a basic human behavior which pervades all domains of human experience. In terms of form, narratives can range from the most complex saga to the simplest recount of mundane events. More fundamentally, however, narratives fulfill certain crucial functions in human life: in cognition, information structuring, identity construction and performance, intersubjectivity, and sociocultural ritual. This course examines the construct of ‘narrative’ — what it is, what its structure is, how it is constructed, how it has been theorized — and how its various functions manifest themselves linguistically in discourse.
Intended Learning Outcomes
CILO-1: Demonstrate knowledge of sign theories.
CILO-2: Perform textual and discourse analysis.
CILO-3: Achieve textual competence and literacy beyond the written word.
CILO-4: Demonstrate skills pertaining to popular media literacy, critical thinking, individual enterprise, and teamwork.