Multilingual Perspectives on Translanguaging

Author:   Jeff MacSwan
Publisher:   Multilingual Matters
ISBN:  

9781800415676


Pages:   392
Publication Date:   13 July 2022
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Multilingual Perspectives on Translanguaging


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Overview

This book brings together a broad, interdisciplinary group of leading scholars to critically assess a recent proposal within translanguaging theory called deconstructivism: the view that discrete or 'named' languages do not exist. Contributors explore important topics in relation to the deconstructivist turn in translanguaging, including epistemology, language ideology, bilingual linguistic competence, codeswitching, bilingual first language acquisition, the neurolinguistics of bilingualism, the significance of language naming to Indigenous language reclamation efforts, implications for bilingual education and language rights, and the effects of translanguaging on immersion programs for endangered languages. Contributing authors converge on support for a multilingual perspective on translanguaging which affirms the pedagogical and conceptual aims of translanguaging but rejects deconstructivism. The book makes a valuable contribution to the development of translanguaging theory and will be required reading for scholars and students interested in one of the most vibrant and vital debates in contemporary applied linguistics.

Full Product Details

Author:   Jeff MacSwan
Publisher:   Multilingual Matters
Imprint:   Multilingual Matters
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.590kg
ISBN:  

9781800415676


ISBN 10:   1800415672
Pages:   392
Publication Date:   13 July 2022
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Contributors Preface: Jeff MacSwan Chapter 1. Jeff MacSwan: Introduction: Deconstructivism – A Reader’s Guide Part 1: Inter-speaker Language Variation Chapter 2. Vivian Cook: Multi-competence and Translanguaging  Chapter 3. James Paul Gee: Experience Coding and Linguistic Variation Part 2: Codeswitching Chapter 4. Jeff MacSwan: Codeswitching, Translanguaging and Bilingual Grammar Chapter 5. Peter Auer: 'Translanguaging' or 'Doing Languages'? Multilingual Practices and the Notion of 'Codes' Chapter 6. Rakesh M. Bhatt & Agnes Bolonyai: Codeswitching and its Terminological Other – Translanguaging Part 3: Psycholinguistics Chapter 7. Fred Genesee: Evidence for Differentiated Languages from Studies of Bilingual First Language Acquisition Chapter 8. Rebecca A. Marks, Teresa Satterfield and Ioulia Kovelman: Integrated Multilingualism and Bilingual Reading Development Part 4: Language Policy Chapter 9. Sheilah E. Nicholas and Teresa L. McCarty: To 'Think in a Different Way' – A Relational Paradigm for Indigenous Language Rights Chapter 10. Terrence G. Wiley: The Grand Erasure: Whatever Happened to Bilingual Education and Language Minority Rights? Part 5: Practice Chapter 11. Joanna McPake and Diane J. Tedick: Translanguaging and Immersion Programs for Minoritized Languages at Risk of Disappearance: Developing a Research Agenda Chapter 12. Christian J. Faltis: Understanding and Resisting Perfect Language and Eugenics-based Language Ideologies in Bilingual Teacher Education Stephen May: Afterword: The Multilingual Turn, Superdiversity and Translanguaging – The Rush from Heterodoxy to Orthodoxy Index

Reviews

Multilingual Perspectives on Translanguaging provides insightful answers to questions such as the following and more: If translanguaging entails that languages are mere theoretical constructs, why does the term suggest 'crossing languages'? If they do not exist, why do speakers claim their languages index their community identities? The chapters are theoretically and empirically well-grounded, resulting in a thought-provoking and stimulating book. * Salikoko S. Mufwene, University of Chicago, USA * MacSwan brings together a powerhouse of established and esteemed contributors to advocate for a multilingual perspective on translanguaging in the study of inter-speaker language variation, codeswitching, and psycholinguistics and practices of language policy, bilingual education, and teacher education. This book is packed with powerful arguments that multilingualism is both psychologically real and socially meaningful. Essential reading for those interested in translanguaging and advocating for social and linguistic justice. * Kendall A. King, University of Minnesota, USA * This is a very important volume. Because ideologies and conceptualizations of language matter, it will be valuable and thought-provoking for everyone engaged in social justice initiatives that focus on the instruments of expression of minoritized populations. * Guadalupe Valdes, Stanford University, USA * The brilliance of Jeff MacSwan's volume lies in its detailed analyses of the always present tensions and contradictions between critical theory and the panoply of empirical research. The authors correctly argue that language liberation does not rest on the erasure of labels that have been used to reproduce linguistic colonialism. What matters most is the keen comprehension of the complexity of achieving conscientization in language de-colonization. This is a must-read book for all language researchers, practitioners, and policymakers. * Donaldo Macedo, University of Massachusetts Boston, USA * This book is a rich multi-author collection which takes issue with one of the latest developments proposed by translanguaging writers such as Garcia, Li Wei and Otheguy: the suggestion that named languages'' e.g French are political constructs rather than psychological realities in the minds of speakers, who have instead a unitary linguistic system [...] a volume which clearly contributes to the advancement of bilingual and multilingual studies from a rich variety of angles. * Leo Paladino, EAL Journal 2023 *


Multilingual Perspectives on Translanguaging provides insightful answers to questions such as the following and more: If translanguaging entails that languages are mere theoretical constructs, why does the term suggest 'crossing languages'? If they do not exist, why do speakers claim their languages index their community identities? The chapters are theoretically and empirically well-grounded, resulting in a thought-provoking and stimulating book. * Salikoko S. Mufwene, University of Chicago, USA * MacSwan brings together a powerhouse of established and esteemed contributors to advocate for a multilingual perspective on translanguaging in the study of inter-speaker language variation, codeswitching, and psycholinguistics and practices of language policy, bilingual education, and teacher education. This book is packed with powerful arguments that multilingualism is both psychologically real and socially meaningful. Essential reading for those interested in translanguaging and advocating for social and linguistic justice. * Kendall A. King, University of Minnesota, USA * This is a very important volume. Because ideologies and conceptualizations of language matter, it will be valuable and thought-provoking for everyone engaged in social justice initiatives that focus on the instruments of expression of minoritized populations. * Guadalupe Valdes, Stanford University, USA * The brilliance of Jeff MacSwan's volume lies in its detailed analyses of the always present tensions and contradictions between critical theory and the panoply of empirical research. The authors correctly argue that language liberation does not rest on the erasure of labels that have been used to reproduce linguistic colonialism. What matters most is the keen comprehension of the complexity of achieving conscientization in language de-colonization. This is a must-read book for all language researchers, practitioners, and policymakers. * Donaldo Macedo, University of Massachusetts Boston, USA *


MacSwan brings together a powerhouse of established and esteemed contributors to advocate for a multilingual perspective on translanguaging in the study of inter-speaker language variation, codeswitching, and psycholinguistics and practices of language policy, bilingual education, and teacher education. This book is packed with powerful arguments that multilingualism is both psychologically real and socially meaningful. Essential reading for those interested in translanguaging and advocating for social and linguistic justice. * Kendall A. King, University of Minnesota, USA * This is a very important volume. Because ideologies and conceptualizations of language matter, it will be valuable and thought-provoking for everyone engaged in social justice initiatives that focus on the instruments of expression of minoritized populations. * Guadalupe Valdes, Stanford University, USA * The brilliance of Jeff MacSwan's volume lies in its detailed analyses of the always present tensions and contradictions between critical theory and the panoply of empirical research. The authors correctly argue that language liberation does not rest on the erasure of labels that have been used to reproduce linguistic colonialism. What matters most is the keen comprehension of the complexity of achieving conscientization in language de-colonization. This is a must-read book for all language researchers, practitioners, and policymakers. * Donaldo Macedo, University of Massachusetts Boston, USA *


Multilingual Perspectives on Translanguaging provides insightful answers to questions such as the following and more: If translanguaging entails that languages are mere theoretical constructs, why does the term suggest ‘crossing languages’? If they do not exist, why do speakers claim their languages index their community identities? The chapters are theoretically and empirically well-grounded, resulting in a thought-provoking and stimulating book. * Salikoko S. Mufwene, University of Chicago, USA * MacSwan brings together a powerhouse of established and esteemed contributors to advocate for a multilingual perspective on translanguaging in the study of inter-speaker language variation, codeswitching, and psycholinguistics and practices of language policy, bilingual education, and teacher education. This book is packed with powerful arguments that multilingualism is both psychologically real and socially meaningful. Essential reading for those interested in translanguaging and advocating for social and linguistic justice. * Kendall A. King, University of Minnesota, USA * This is a very important volume. Because ideologies and conceptualizations of language matter, it will be valuable and thought-provoking for everyone engaged in social justice initiatives that focus on the instruments of expression of minoritized populations. * Guadalupe Valdés, Stanford University, USA * The brilliance of Jeff MacSwan’s volume lies in its detailed analyses of the always present tensions and contradictions between critical theory and the panoply of empirical research. The authors correctly argue that language liberation does not rest on the erasure of labels that have been used to reproduce linguistic colonialism. What matters most is the keen comprehension of the complexity of achieving conscientization in language de-colonization. This is a must-read book for all language researchers, practitioners, and policymakers. * Donaldo Macedo, University of Massachusetts Boston, USA * This book is a rich multi-author collection which takes issue with one of the latest developments proposed by translanguaging writers such as Garcia, Li Wei and Otheguy: the suggestion that “named languages’’ e.g French are political constructs rather than psychological realities in the minds of speakers, who have instead a unitary linguistic system [...] a volume which clearly contributes to the advancement of bilingual and multilingual studies from a rich variety of angles. * Leo Paladino, EAL Journal 2023 * ...the book offers thoughtful responses to the pressing inquiries about translanguaging with theoretically and empirically diverse points of view. Rather than merely explaining the claims of translanguaging, it seeks to understand it from the perspectives of codeswitching, psycholinguistics, language policy, bilingual education, and teacher education. * Onur Özkaynak, The Ohio State University, USA, TESOL Journal, 2023 * The true value of this collection is found in the interdisciplinary team of scholars, who across 12 chapters elaborate on a diverse range of topics that cover codeswitching, bilingual language development, first and second language acquisition, duallanguage immersion programs, neurolinguistics, Indigenous language history, and linguicism. * Kai Greene, California State University, USA, Teachers College Record 2023 * ...this book provides a great deal of thought-provoking reading for sociolinguists. It illustrates the diverse sociocultural contexts in which multilingualism and bilingualism are located, albeit illustrated predominantly with examples from the US and the UK. And for those who, like me, considered translanguaging to be largely a pedagogical issue which had unfortunately leaked into theory and developed to challenge important and soundly based concepts like code-switching, this book makes it clear that the issues are much deeper and have more serious consequences. * Janet Holmes, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, Language in Society *


Author Information

Jeff MacSwan is Professor of Applied Linguistics and Language Education at the University of Maryland, USA. He is also Professor of Neuroscience and Cognitive Science, and affiliate Professor in the Department of Linguistics, the Center for the Advanced Study of Language, and the Maryland Language Science Center. His research focuses on the linguistic study of bilingualism and codeswitching (or language alternation), and its implications for theories about the role of language in educational settings for multilingual students.

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