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Relanguaging Language from a South African Township School

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Using data from a long-term ethnographic study of English language classrooms in a South African township, this book conceptualises language teaching not as a progression from one fixed language to...
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  • 20 December 2021
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Using data from a long-term ethnographic study of English language classrooms in a South African township, this book highlights linguistic expertise in a setting where it is not usually expected or sought. Rather than being ‘peripheral and unskilled’, South African township teachers and learners emerge as skilled (re)languagers central to the workings of South African education, and to our understanding of how language classrooms work. This book foregrounds the heterogeneity, flexibility and creativity of day-to-day language practices that African urban spaces are known for, and conceptualises language teaching not as a progression from one fixed language to another, but as a circular sorting process between linguistic heterogeneity (languaging) and homogeneity (a standard language).  

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Price: $161.95
Pages: 241
Publisher: Channel View Publications
Imprint: Multilingual Matters
Series: New Perspectives on Language and Education
Publication Date: 20 December 2021
Trim Size: 9.20 X 6.15 in
ISBN: 9781800412125
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Study & Teaching, Language teaching theory and methods, LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / General, Bilingualism and multilingualism
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Lara Krause presents a startlingly innovative, deeply meditative, yet meticulously reasoned and entirely convincing, approach to educational languaging. Substantiating her exhaustive interrogation of prevailing hypotheses with a thoroughgoing analysis of what actually happens in a township classroom, Krause develops a bold new conceptual framework.

Lara-Stephanie Krause is Assistant Professor in the Institute of African Studies, Leipzig University, Germany. Her research interests include fixity / fluidity of language in education, (trans)languaging, language and protest movements, actor-network theory, and science and technology studies.

Chapter 1. Introduction

Chapter 2. Relanguaging Language towards an Alternative Perspective

Chapter 3. A Linguistic Ethnography for Seeing More      

Chapter 4. An Eagle Learning to Fly and an Analyst Learning to See          

Chapter 5. Complexities around Uing and Testing in Khayelitsha

Chapter 6. Rewriting Nomolanguages    

Chapter 7. Conclusion: So What?          

Notes
Appendices
References