Linguistic Anthropology

Linguistic Anthropology at the University of Texas at Austin offers an exceptionally diverse and comprehensive training program that is unique and unparalleled in the US. Our strength lies in our interdisciplinary approach to the teaching and applications of Linguistic Anthropology, whereby students benefit from a program grounded in sociocultural and sociolinguistic theory.

Graduate students select and combine from a broad range of expertise when developing a program of study, including:

The Department of Anthropology at UT Austin has an exceptionally strong faculty in Social Anthropology, and students in Linguistic Anthropology receive excellent instruction in sociocultural theory in their first semester in the program. Students may opt to take as many courses in the Department's five subfields as they wish. The Department also houses the The Américo Paredes Center for Cultural Studies, with its focus on the expressive forms of public culture, folklore, performance, and popular culture. Students in our program normally take the Center's core course as one of their required Anthropology cores.

UT Austin also has a top-ranked Department of Linguistics, where the field of Sociolinguistics figures prominently. Students in Linguistic Anthropology take courses with the Linguistics faculty who represent a comprehensive range of expertise, interests, and language areas. The departments of Anthropology and Linguistics continuously build close relationships among faculty and students through social and professional activities, which include symposia, interest groups, and coordinated course offerings in such areas as natural discourse, social meaning and social variation in language, the nature of speech communities, and the social basis of language change.

Within Linguistic Anthropology, we have a strong commitment to providing our undergraduate and graduate students with state-of-the-art equipment for coursework, field research, and data analysis in our Multimedia Lab. Relevant faculty and courses can also be found across the University, especially in the departments of English, French-Italian, Speech Communication, and Rhetoric and Composition.

In addition, faculty and students in linguistic anthropology and sociolinguistics maintain a continuing interest in the linguistic and cultural diversity found in Texas and adjacent areas, and students are encouraged to take advantage of the ample opportunities for fieldwork in the region.