Description
We are working within an increasingly globalised knowledge economy, where researchers collaborate in cross-cultural teams, collect data in a variety of languages and share findings for international audiences who may be unfamiliar with the cultural context. Researching across Languages and Cultures is a guide for doctoral students and other researchers engaged in such multilingual and intercultural research, providing a framework for analysis and development of their experiences.
Demonstrating the link between the theoretical approaches offered by the authors and the practical problems encountered by doctoral researchers, this ground-breaking book draws on research interviews with doctoral students from around the world. Students’ written reflections on their experiences are presented as interludes between each chapter. A practical, hands-on guide to planning, conducting and writing up research, the book explores the crucial roles involved in interpreting data across cultures within doctoral research.
Key topics include:
- The role of the interpreter and/or local research assistant in the research process and the ethics of translation.
- Constructing knowledge across cultures: addressing questions of audience, power and voice
- Academic literacy practices in multilingual settings
- The doctoral student’s role within the geopolitics of academic publishing and forms of research dissemination
- The pragmatics of mediated communication (implicatures, intentions, dialogue)
Researchers who come from and work in monolingual societies often forget that their context is unusual – most of the world live in multilingual contexts, where linguistic shifts and hybridities are the norm. Two authors with extensive experience, together with a number of their existing or former research students, share insights into these issues that surround language and culture in research.
This book will be a useful guide for academic researchers, doctoral students, research supervisors and Masters students who carry out empirical research in multilingual or multicultural contexts and/or are writing about their research for a diverse readership across the world.
Table of Contents
Preface 1. From cross-cultural to intercultural: an alternative perspective on the research process. 1a. Reflective piece by Pu Shi: Language, theory and power: cross-cultural issues in educational research 2. Multilingual research: accounting for the richness of ‘context’ 2a. Reflective piece by Eleni Konidari: Dressing with a scarf while undressing the prejudice. 3. The pragmatics of doing research across languages: inferences and intentions (Alain Wolf). 3a. Reflective piece by Achala Gupta: Cultural connotations in language structures: An experiential account of meaning making in the processes of translation. 4. The role of the interpreter/translator in the research process: the ethics of mediated communication. 4a. Reflective piece by Gina Lontoc: Transcribing language, translating culture? Transcription convention and issues on translation in educational research. 5. Writing across cultures: reader expectations and ‘crises of identity’ 5a. Reflective piece by Joanna Nair: Writing Relationships 6. Research in a multilingual context: Joining an international community of researchers. Endpiece
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