Full Description
While substantial research has looked backward at the colonial history of language and forward to the potential of decolonizing English for linguistic justice, there is a lack of investigation looking inward at the lived raciolinguistic experiences of multilingual scholars. This edited collection opens a healing space for storytelling and deepens readers' understanding of raciolinguistics in practice through autoethnography. The book brings together language education researchers and scholars, with each author representing and in contact with multiple cultural, linguistic and ethnic backgrounds. Together they create a community of practice to bring scholars with diverse backgrounds together for inward reflections on their lived raciolinguistic experiences. Through this journey, the book empowers both the chapter contributors and readers and allies who may see themselves in the stories to reflect, learn and change their practices, and provides valuable insights into raciolinguistics and autoethnography as a research method.
Contents
Contributors
Foreword
Part 1: Introduction
Chapter 1. Qianqian Zhang-Wu and Bridget Goodman: Looking Inward Through Autoethnographies
Part 2: Navigating Transitions
Chapter 2. Xiaoye You: Writing the Transnational Racial Subject
Chapter 3. Qianqian Zhang-Wu: 'I don't know English Department now offers CHINESE writing classes!': Raciolinguistic Struggles of a Chinese Woman Working as an English Professor in the US
Chapter 4. Bolormaa Shinjee: 'Did You Bring My Lunch, Beautiful'? Self-Reflection of a Female Academic from the Global South
Part 3: Reclaiming Identity
Chapter 5. Renata Love Jones: Yonder's Endarkened Pedagogies
Chapter 6. Jung Kim: 'Jung like Jungle': (Re)Claiming Names and Languages
Chapter 7. Ellen Cushman: Unsettling Raciolinguistics: Reclaiming Indigenous Language Practices
Chapter 8. Nariman Amantayev: Autoethnographic Inquiry into Raciolinguistic Ideology within the Same Ethnicity and an Invitation to Reconsider Kazakh Language Teaching Practices
Part 4: Self-Positioning as Researchers
Chapter 9. Sibonile Mpendukana and Miché Thompson: Embodied Moments of Racialisation in Research
Chapter 10. Ming-Hsuan Wu and Genevieve Leung: Legitimately Occupying Peripheral 'Asian' and 'American' Spaces: A Dialogue Between Two Language Teaching Professionals
Chapter 11. Anna Becker: 'You Sound Like from the CD' - An Autoethnographic Narrative about 'Multilingual' Teaching and Research in 'Multilingual' Switzerland
Chapter 12. Bridget Goodman: Shades of Beige? One White Scholar's Imperfect(ive) Quest for Racial and Linguistic Justice
Part 5: Reflection Through Writing
Chapter 13. Shreya Sangai: English Departments Here and There: Rebuke and Mistrust, Compassion and Rebuilding
Chapter 14. Sandro Barros: Brazilian Landscape with Rain: On the Languaged Brown Body Below the Equator
Chapter 15. Jeannette D. Alarcón: Walking a Raciolinguistic Path Con Mi Abuela
Part 6: Conclusion
Chapter 16. Bridget Goodman and Qianqian Zhang-Wu: From Looking Inward to Looking Forward
Index