Description
Book SynopsisMultimodalities and Chinese Students'' L2 Practices: Identity, Community, and Literacy explores the complex relations and interactions among multimodality, positioning, and agency in increasingly digitized, multilingual, and multicultural contexts. Min Wang uses interview narratives, WeChat exchanges, and class observations and field notes of three Chinese international students' lived experiences of English learning and use in their everyday environments to show that these L2 learners recognized, appreciated, and appropriated affordances of multiple modes and digital tools for their L2 literacies practices. Through these tools and modes, they positioned themselves as confident, able, and competent L2 users, but sometimes also struggling and ambivalent. The practice of meaning-making, remaking, designing, and redesigning demonstrated their agency as L2 learners, which motivated and inspired them to (re)produce and (re)create meanings through discourses for the purpose of presenting des
Trade Review"Min Wang’s fine-grained case study of three Chinese learners of English in the USA provides much insight into the way international students navigate complex transnational identities. A timely and important contribution to our understanding of language learning in the digital age."
-- Bonny Norton, University of British Columbia, Canada
"Min Wang has conducted a careful analysis of the positioning moves and agentive actions of three Chinese students learning English in a university-based language institute in the U.S. By examining multiple dimensions of these students’ positioning work across time, through varied modalities, and in different locations—both physical and virtual, Wang provides a powerful demonstration of how identity, agency and language learning are interdependent phenomena. Applied linguists and other scholars will welcome this important contribution to the growing body of research using holistic, ecological approaches when examining agency and language learning." -- Elizabeth Miller, University of North Carolina
"In this book, the reader will see how young adult L2 learners develop multimodal and multilingual literacies and navigate their positional identities as a capable community member in a social context. This is an excellent contribution to the second language field with important theoretical and practical insights." -- Bogum Yoon, State University of New York at Binghamton
Table of ContentsForeword
Introduction
Part 1 Theories and Methodology
Chapter 1 Theories, Setting, and Methods
Part 2 Narrating L2 Learners’ Cultural Experiences
Chapter 2 Stories of Chinese Names and Keepsakes
Part 3 Life in America
Chapter 3 Narratives of Embarrassing Experiences and Attempts for Opportunities
Chapter 4 Interactions in the WeChat Discussion Group
Chapter 5 Practicing L2 Literacies in the ELI
Part 4 Conclusion and Implications
Chapter 6 Concluding Remarks and Takeaways
Bibliography
About the Author