The first semester of Area Studies in French
is built
on two dimensions: Content and
Language
The content dimension of French 1 provides a
basic historical, geographical, political and cultural introduction
to the French-speaking countries and regions (with a particular
view to France), covering their identities, political cultures,
economies and institutions as well as their international
relations.
The topics, concepts and perspectives raised during the course
help develop the student's cultural sensitivity and
understanding of viewpoints, narratives and institutions that are
specific to the language area.
Topics dealt with during the course include: why and how French
is spoken by approx. 300 million people across five continents
today; the characteristics and formation of contemporary
francophone States and identities (global, national, regional and
postcolonial); the international and economic relations
characterizing the francophone space.
The language dimension aims at improving
the students’ basic language skills (grammar and vocabulary),
pronunciation and fluency; as well as their reading and oral
comprehension of the foreign language. Emphasis is also put on
learning and using phrases needed to make presentations and to
participate actively in discussions.
Integration
The course lays the foundation of the second semester area
studies course in French 2 - that focuses on markets, institutions
and the interplay between globalization and local/specific contexts
in the French speaking countries.
It integrates with the course on Cultural Analysis for Business
and it seeks to apply the concepts from this course to actual
problems and cases from the French-speaking countries.
Students are expected to apply the theories and methods from
Cultural Analysis for Business to analyse and explain
developments and behaviours in business-contexts in the
French-speaking countries. They are trained in being aware of
culturally based differences in behaviour and to reflect on the
reasons for these differences and the consequences for
intercultural communication and collaboration.
Nordic nine
In the course students acquire deep knowledge on markets and
learn to interpret the workings of markets in the broad context of
language, identity, history, and culture. They learn to
deduce knowledge from different sources and to be critical about
their own cultural understanding and possible biases when
interpreting and discussing new knowledge with fellow students.
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