-
- Home
- New students
- Current students
- People
- Study Exeter
- Study Cornwall
- Research
- News/events
- Contact us
Module POL3000 for 2018/9
- Overview
- Aims and Learning Outcomes
- Module Content
- Indicative Reading List
- Assessment
Undergraduate Module Descriptor
POL3000: Deadly Words: The Language of Political Violence
This module descriptor refers to the 2018/9 academic year.
Module Aims
The primary aim of this module is to develop the analytical skills required for the study of extremist texts and speeches. You will gain a fine understanding of the most pertinent theoretical approaches focusing on language and conflict broadly construed, and will learn to put these approaches to play for the study of violent political actors’ communications.
More broadly, the module ought to strengthen your critical understanding of 1) political communication at large (including mainstream), 2) conflict and insecurity, and 3) processes of “othering”, categorization and classifications in socio-political contexts.
On successfully completing the programme you will be able to: | |
---|---|
Module-Specific Skills | 1. Identify the main approaches and theories of language and violence; 2. Explain in a sophisticated way how these theories help to analyse specific cases; 3. Draw the implications of this theoretical framework to a wider variety of political speeches and texts in a critical way; |
Discipline-Specific Skills | 4. Integrate complex and unconnected scientific inquiries (from various disciplines) within a single coherent piece of analysis on extremist political language; 5. Apply highly theoretical constructs to real-life political examples; 6. Analyse past and ongoing political problems through the prism of the theoretical framework seen in class; |
Personal and Key Skills | 7. Applying practical analysis of any example of extremist language. 8. Deliver a systematic analysis of a real case of extremist prose that is written rigorously yet comprehensibly for a non-academic target readership. |