COURSE DETAIL
COURSE DETAIL
COURSE DETAIL
This course explores how to analyze and describe linguistic structures (oral and written) through theoretical frameworks on linguistic use. It examines different linguistic productions in the context of production and interpretation. Topics include: discourse and context; the people in discourse; textual typology and discursive genres; linguistic properties of text; discourse and society.
COURSE DETAIL
This course discusses communication in a professional setting. Topics include: communication in business; active listening; empathy; assertive behavior; non-verbal communication; the importance of feedback; constructive criticism; constructive debate; difficult conversations; intercultural communication; written communication.
COURSE DETAIL
COURSE DETAIL
This course analyzes the fundamental aspects of three great proposals on human action: the Aristotelian conception of voluntary action, the Kantian description of motivation, and the phenomenological distinctions between desire and will, and motives and causes.
COURSE DETAIL
This course offers a study of victimology as a necessary subject within the field of criminology to examine the person and their role as victim. It discusses the role of the victim today and identifies perceptions and reciprocal attitudes about offenders and victims. Lastly, this course explores the idea of knowledge of the victim as a means to prevent crime.
COURSE DETAIL
This course explores the emerging writers in Britain from 1950 onwards. It analyzes the relationship between their work and modernism, as well as their role in the global canon of British tradition. Additionally, this course examines the interaction between contemporary English fiction and other characteristics of post-modern cultural events.
COURSE DETAIL
COURSE DETAIL
This course examines the social, economic, cultural, political, and international dimensions of the history of women and gender relations. It discusses the presence and evolution of patriarchy in different societies, the importance of gender as a factor of inequality, and the theoretical foundations of feminism within western philosophical trends and its contribution to societal evolution.
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