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This edited volume unpacks the familiar concepts of language,
literacy and learning, and promotes dialogue and bridge building
within and across these concepts. Its specific interest lies in
bridging the gap between Literacy Studies (or New Literacy
Studies), on the one hand, and SLA and scholarship in learning in
multilingual contexts, on the other. The chapters in the volume
center-stage empirical analysis, and each addresses gaps in the
scholarship between the two domains. The volume addresses the need
to engage with the concepts, categorizations and boundaries that
pertain to language, literacy and learning. This need is especially
felt in our globalized society, which is characterized by constant,
fast and unpredictable mobility of people, goods, ideas and values.
The editors of this volume are founding members of the Nordic
Network LLL (Language, Literacy and Learning). They have initiated
a string of workshops and have discussed this theme at Nordic
meetings and at symposia at international conferences.
This volume fills a gap in the literature between the domains of
Communication Studies and Educational Sciences across
physical-virtual spaces as they intersect in the 21st century. The
chapters focus on "languaging" - communicative practices in the
making - and its intersection with analogue and virtual learning
spaces, bringing together studies that highlight the constant
movement between analogue-virtual dimensions that continuously
re-shape participants' identity positionings. Languaging is
understood as the deployment of one or more than one language
variety, modality, embodiment, etc in human meaning-making across
spaces. Languaging activities are explored through a multitude of
literary artefacts, genres, media, and modes produced in and across
sites. The authors go beyond "best practice" approaches and instead
present "how-to-explore" communicative practices for researchers,
learners and teachers. This book will be of interest to readers
situated in the areas of literacy, literature, bi/multilingualism,
multimodality, linguistic anthropology, applied linguistics, and
related fields. Chapters 2, 5, 8 and 12 are open access under a CC
BY 4.0 license at link.springer.com.
This edited volume unpacks the familiar concepts of language,
literacy and learning, and promotes dialogue and bridge building
within and across these concepts. Its specific interest lies in
bridging the gap between Literacy Studies (or New Literacy
Studies), on the one hand, and SLA and scholarship in learning in
multilingual contexts, on the other. The chapters in the volume
center-stage empirical analysis, and each addresses gaps in the
scholarship between the two domains. The volume addresses the need
to engage with the concepts, categorizations and boundaries that
pertain to language, literacy and learning. This need is especially
felt in our globalized society, which is characterized by constant,
fast and unpredictable mobility of people, goods, ideas and values.
The editors of this volume are founding members of the Nordic
Network LLL (Language, Literacy and Learning). They have initiated
a string of workshops and have discussed this theme at Nordic
meetings and at symposia at international conferences.
This volume fills a gap in the literature between the domains of
Communication Studies and Educational Sciences across
physical-virtual spaces as they intersect in the 21st century. The
chapters focus on "languaging" - communicative practices in the
making - and its intersection with analogue and virtual learning
spaces, bringing together studies that highlight the constant
movement between analogue-virtual dimensions that continuously
re-shape participants' identity positionings. Languaging is
understood as the deployment of one or more than one language
variety, modality, embodiment, etc in human meaning-making across
spaces. Languaging activities are explored through a multitude of
literary artefacts, genres, media, and modes produced in and across
sites. The authors go beyond "best practice" approaches and instead
present "how-to-explore" communicative practices for researchers,
learners and teachers. This book will be of interest to readers
situated in the areas of literacy, literature, bi/multilingualism,
multimodality, linguistic anthropology, applied linguistics, and
related fields. Chapters 2, 5, 8 and 12 are open access under a CC
BY 4.0 license at link.springer.com.
While issues of marginalization and participation have engaged
scholars across various disciplines and domains, and a range of
theoretical perspectives and methodological framings have been
deployed in this enterprise, the research presented in this volume
aligns itself to alternative traditions by focusing on people's
membership and participation across settings and institutional
contexts. The work here, thus, focuses on the constitution of
marginalization inside, outside and across a range of settings. It
centre-stages marginalization and participation as action in the
human world. Going beyond a focus on the marginalized or
explanations of marginalization or comparing groups of the
marginalized with the non-marginalized, a number of contributions
focus on mundane processes inside, outside and across institutional
settings in different geopolitical spaces. Other chapters in the
book demonstrate the marginalization of specific analytical foci in
the research process or hegemonies of national high-stake testing
protocols and specific dialects in different geopolitical regions
or in domains such as the sporting arena.In contrast to other
studies on marginalization and participation, this book takes its
point of departure in the complexities that characterize and shape
both individuals and societies, past and present. Its chapters
challenge demarcated fields of study and conceptions of identity
framed marginalization and participation. Drawing attention to the
fact that the centre (continues to) define the margins, the work
presented here joins research efforts that highlight the need to
focus on the constitution of marginalization and participation in a
wide range of settings with the explicit aim of going beyond static
boundaries that define the human state at different scales of
becoming and beyond an understanding of development and progress in
terms of a linear trajectory.
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