Teachers and researches of language have dedicated years of work to
understanding the relationship between language and culture. This
book is yet another contribution to this endevour. It represents an
ethnographic account of how students of a large public American
university in the Midwest learned Russian language and culture. The
findings are presented in the light of the theoretical framework
based on Bakhtinian understanding of dialogue and monologue in
culture and Vygotskian understanding of practice, offering an
interpretation of language learning as a unique individual
practice, and culture as a multidimensional phenomenon
co-constructed in a dialogue, but a dialogue often constrained by
the monologic genres of human interaction. Its goals is to help
teachers think of new ways of creatively weaving cultural knowledge
into their unique pedagogies and to introduce an international
research community to a new piece of data and theory driven
evidence of how languge and culture are connected.
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