27 Courses
Australian studies forms part of the academic field of cultural studies. It involves an examination of what constructs Australia’s national identity. This area of scholarship traditionally involves the study of Australian history, society and culture but can be extended to the study of Australian politics. This area also includes the study of Australia’s Indigenous population, Aboriginals and Torres Strait Islanders, including their earlier contact with the Macassans of South Sulawesi, Indonesia
This course helps students to have an understanding of both the construction and meaning of English poetry,
in particular the production of the writers of ‘Anglo-Saxon’ cultural background. Attention is mostly given to the structural elements of poetry, and poetic devices, such as imagery, rhythm, figurative language and musical devices. Attention is also given to poetry analysis – applying the methods and techniques of taking a poem apart in order to arrive
at its understanding.
This course provides the timeline and characteristics of English literature from the period of the first English literature, the coming of Normans, Chaucer, the beginning of English Drama, Early Elizabethan Drama, William Shakespeare, Other Elizabethan Dramatists, Renaissance literature, Tudor Poetry and Prose, the age of Milton, the age of Dryden, the new Drama, poetry and prose in the age of reason, Romantic period, the coming of modern age, to present day literature.
This course is designed to provide students with receptive and productive skills at using English in communication. The emphasis is on the correct use of basic English structure, vocabulary, pronunciation, stress and intonation patterns in oral communication as well as written communication through intensive classroom practice, such as dialogues and role playing, as well as pair, group, and class activities. In addition, laboratory assignments and individual tutorials may be given on the basis of individual student needs. This is a theme-based course.
Field Linguistics, is going to discuss about (1) The
scientific study of language fieldwork , (2) selecting informant,
working in informant, (3) collecting and organizing data, introductory procedure, (5) text collection and transcription data and (5) reporting the result of the data
collection in the research.
English Morphology discusses about (1) definition of morpheme, morph and allomorph, (2) free and bound morphemes, lexical and grammatical morphemes (3) morphological process, inflectional and derivation morphemes, (4) prefix, infix, suffix, affixes (con fix, simulfix and multi affix), and (5) compounding, reduplication, blending, and back formation
Setelah mengikuti mata kuliah ini mahasiswa diharapkan mampu memahami pengertian sastra dan bentuk-bentuk karya sastra khususnya dalam tiga genre utama puisi, prosa, dan drama serta mampu menganalisis dan mempraktekkannya dengan baik.
Introduction to
Linguistics, is going to discuss about (1) some basic concept and theories of linguistics, and language (2) the characteristics of language, function of language, and some features of human language (3) , Pure Linguistics ( Phonology, morphology, syntax and semantics, and pragmatics) , (4) Applied Linguistics (Sociolinguistics, Psycholinguistics, and Anthropological linguistics, and (5) the school of linguistics.
Drama is a genre (type) of literary work that describes human life with motion. Drama depicts the reality of human life, character, and behavior through the roles and dialogues presented at the stage. This course is going to provide the students of English Literature to express themselves in form of Drama performance and being able to practice their English competence in the dialogues at the same time.
The history of a language is the history of the people who speak it, those who read and write it, and those who come into contact with it. This is a course in which we will examine the origin and development of the English language, from its earliest beginnings in the misty past, through Old English (or Anglo-Saxon), Middle English, Early Modern English, and Present Day English, and across the post-modern globe. Language is a fundamental cornerstone of all human culture. The study of what language is and how it changes, and how these changes are grounded in parallel cultural changes, is therefore a subject of intrinsic value, especially to those interested in literature, linguistics, history, and cultural studies.