|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Bedrettin Yazan , Suresh Canagarajah , Rashi JainPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.453kg ISBN: 9780367428587ISBN 10: 036742858 Pages: 268 Publication Date: 06 November 2020 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() 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"Autoethnographies in ELT: Transnational Identities, Pedagogies, and Practices Editors: Bedrettin Yazan, Suresh Canagarajah, & Rashi Jain Table of Contents Introduction: Autoethnography as research in ELT: Methodological challenges and affordances in the exploration of transnational identities, pedagogies, and practices * Bedrettin Yazan, Suresh Canagarajah, & Rashi Jain Part 1: Traversing liminal spaces in communities, cultures, and languages * Chapter 1: Challenges and Successes in Negotiating Identity and Asserting Agency as an Irish, Transcultural, Boundary-spanning, ELT Academic * Margaret M. Lieb Chapter 2. Across the Atlantic and Back again: A TESOL Practitioner’s Journey from the Monolingual, through the Bilingual, to the Multilingual * Anna Krulatz Chapter 3. When My Professor Tells Me to Write Poetry in My Second Language: A Poetic Autoethnography * Fang-Yu Liao Chapter 4. Invisible Borders: On Being a Ghanaian Immigrant in the United States * Amoako Kayser Chapter 5. Dear Eric: An Autoethnodrama of Exploring Professional Legitimacy as a Transnational EFL Instructor * Eric K. Ku Part 2: Traversing liminal spaces in academic research * Chapter 6. (Re)Imagining Myself as a Translingual, a Transnational, and a Pracademic: A Critical Autoethnographic Account * Rashi Jain Chapter 7. Floating on English in a Rising Sea of Globalization: Liminality, Liability, Transformation * Adnan Ajšić Chapter 8. Bridge Building through a Duoethnography: Stories of Nepantleras in a Land of Liberation * Ethan Trinh & Leonardo Javier Merino Méndez Chapter 9. Identities of European-based Transnational Researchers in TESOL: An Ecological Perspective * Jun Jin, Sarah Mercer, Sonja Babic, & Astrid Mairitsch Part 3: Traversing liminal spaces of pedagogies * Chapter 10. I’m From Foreign: Transnational Identity Construction in the Journey of Being and Becoming an ESOL Educator * Sarina Chugani Molina Chapter 11. Towards Glocally Situated TESOL Practices: Collaborative Autoethnography * Soyoung Sarah Han, Mari Haneda, & Magda Madany-Saa Chapter 12. Uncovering Transnational Practitioner-Researchers’ Identity and Equity-oriented Practices: A Critical Lens * Andrea Lypka & Imelda Bangun Chapter 13. What do we bring to ""THE TABLE""? - A Visual Autoethnography of Underrepresented Asian TESOL Practitioners in the US * Suriati Abas, Suparna Bose, Yeoeun Park & Jun Takahashi"ReviewsThis volume, an enjoyable read, lays out appealing stories of individuals engaged in the labor of destabilizing and negotiating their transnational and transcultural identities. The chapter narrators shine a light on ways that questions of belonging, community, connection, and identity are constituted and thrown into question against a backdrop of their own pedagogies, disciplines, and practices. Curling up with this book left me hopeful about the promise held by the proposed concept identity-as-methodology in the hands of reflective, agentive practitioners such as this group of authors. - Suhanthie Motha, University of Washington The editors of this book have curated a stunning collection of autoethnographies, which capture the emotional, social and psychological twists and turns of living and working in transnational spaces. The narrative content is immensely readable and interesting, as well as being theoretically informed. Anyone interested in innovative methodological approaches to exploring identity should read this book. - Gary Barkhuizen, University of Auckland In ELT, there is a growing desire for communities and methodologies of inquiry capable of traversing national, ideological and disciplinary boundaries. The potential for autoethnography to address such concerns is fully explored in this insightful book. With its rich diversity of perspectives and settings, and its attention to emotion and identity work, this inspiring collection is a most welcome resource for those seeking to transform old habits of thought and practice in second/additional language learning settings. - Brian Morgan, Glendon College, Toronto ""This volume, an enjoyable read, lays out appealing stories of individuals engaged in the labor of destabilizing and negotiating their transnational and transcultural identities. The chapter narrators shine a light on ways that questions of belonging, community, connection, and identity are constituted and thrown into question against a backdrop of their own pedagogies, disciplines, and practices. Curling up with this book left me hopeful about the promise held by the proposed concept identity-as-methodology in the hands of reflective, agentive practitioners such as this group of authors.""- Suhanthie Motha, University of Washington ""The editors of this book have curated a stunning collection of autoethnographies, which capture the emotional, social and psychological twists and turns of living and working in transnational spaces. The narrative content is immensely readable and interesting, as well as being theoretically informed. Anyone interested in innovative methodological approaches to exploring identity should read this book."" - Gary Barkhuizen, University of Auckland ""In ELT, there is a growing desire for communities and methodologies of inquiry capable of traversing national, ideological and disciplinary boundaries. The potential for autoethnography to address such concerns is fully explored in this insightful book. With its rich diversity of perspectives and settings, and its attention to emotion and identity work, this inspiring collection is a most welcome resource for those seeking to transform old habits of thought and practice in second/additional language learning settings."" - Brian Morgan, Glendon College, Toronto This volume, an enjoyable read, lays out appealing stories of individuals engaged in the labor of destabilizing and negotiating their transnational and transcultural identities. The chapter narrators shine a light on ways that questions of belonging, community, connection, and identity are constituted and thrown into question against a backdrop of their own pedagogies, disciplines, and practices. Curling up with this book left me hopeful about the promise held by the proposed concept identity-as-methodology in the hands of reflective, agentive practitioners such as this group of authors. - Suhanthie Motha, University of Washington The editors of this book have curated a stunning collection of autoethnographies, which capture the emotional, social and psychological twists and turns of living and working in transnational spaces. The narrative content is immensely readable and interesting, as well as being theoretically informed. Anyone interested in innovative methodological approaches to exploring identity should read this book. - Gary Barkhuizen, University of Auckland In ELT, there is a growing desire for communities and methodologies of inquiry capable of traversing national, ideological and disciplinary boundaries. The potential for autoethnography to address such concerns is fully explored in this insightful book. With its rich diversity of perspectives and settings, and its attention to emotion and identity work, this inspiring collection is a most welcome resource for those seeking to transform old habits of thought and practice in second/additional language learning settings. - Brian Morgan, Glendon College, Toronto Author InformationBedrettin Yazan is an Associate Professor of TESL Teacher Education/Applied Linguistics at the University of Texas, San Antonio. Suresh Canagarajah is the Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of English, Applied Linguistics, and Asian Studies, and Director of the Migration Studies Project at Pennsylvania State University. Rashi Jain is an associate professor in the English Language for Academic Purposes Program at Montgomery College in Rockville, Maryland. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |