Description

Book Synopsis

This book examines the writing practices of three adult multilingual writers through the prism of their writing in English as an additional language. It illustrates some of the social, cultural and political contexts of the writers’ literacy activities and discusses how these impact their literate and intellectual lives. It reflects on the para- and meta-textual dimensions of writing because organic writing practices are almost always performed within sociocultural and power-relational contexts. In our highly compartmentalized educational structures, writing education has been severed from those organic components, focusing mainly on writing stylistics. This book proposes creating space for organic writing practices in our everyday writing pedagogies, and argues for a writing pedagogy that acknowledges the complex interactions of social, emotional and identity-related layers of writing.



Trade Review
Amir Kalan’s participatory ethnographic research with three adult multilingual English writers reveals how monolingual language ideologies, formalist pedagogies, and industrialized assessment practices have kept Anglo-Americentric educational institutions oblivious to the richness and complexity of immigrants’ cultural and discursive experience. Kalan’s exemplary case studies show how this experience might be tapped as an intellectual catalyst, with writing re-figured as an emergent activity of hermeneutic design, semiotic dexterity, and rhetorical consciousness of language-power relations. * John Trimbur, Emerson College, USA *
Kalan has written one of those rare scholarly texts in education which is theoretically rich while simultaneously offering concrete suggestions for practice and policy. Through eminently lucid and engaging prose, this book provides textured portraits of how multilingual writers draw upon their rich transnational cultural repertoires to navigate their social worlds. In doing so, it also prefigures a cosmopolitanism that is not naïve to issues of power and inequity during this period of resurgent xenophobia. A hopeful gem of a book. * Gerald Campano, University of Pennsylvania, USA *

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

1. Introduction

2. Conceptual and Empirical Background

3. Making Sense of Histories and Literate Legacies

4. Literacy and Writing Discourses

5. Writing as a Power Differential

6. Written Texts as Organic Outgrowth of Complex Linguistic and Cultural Repertoires

7. Social and Institutional Lived Experiences

8. Mechanics and Practicalities

9. Implications, Recommendations, and Potential Further Directions

References

Sociocultural and Power-Relational Dimensions of

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    A Paperback / softback by Amir Kalan

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      Publisher: Multilingual Matters
      Publication Date: 14/05/2021
      ISBN13: 9781788926706, 978-1788926706
      ISBN10: 1788926706

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This book examines the writing practices of three adult multilingual writers through the prism of their writing in English as an additional language. It illustrates some of the social, cultural and political contexts of the writers’ literacy activities and discusses how these impact their literate and intellectual lives. It reflects on the para- and meta-textual dimensions of writing because organic writing practices are almost always performed within sociocultural and power-relational contexts. In our highly compartmentalized educational structures, writing education has been severed from those organic components, focusing mainly on writing stylistics. This book proposes creating space for organic writing practices in our everyday writing pedagogies, and argues for a writing pedagogy that acknowledges the complex interactions of social, emotional and identity-related layers of writing.



      Trade Review
      Amir Kalan’s participatory ethnographic research with three adult multilingual English writers reveals how monolingual language ideologies, formalist pedagogies, and industrialized assessment practices have kept Anglo-Americentric educational institutions oblivious to the richness and complexity of immigrants’ cultural and discursive experience. Kalan’s exemplary case studies show how this experience might be tapped as an intellectual catalyst, with writing re-figured as an emergent activity of hermeneutic design, semiotic dexterity, and rhetorical consciousness of language-power relations. * John Trimbur, Emerson College, USA *
      Kalan has written one of those rare scholarly texts in education which is theoretically rich while simultaneously offering concrete suggestions for practice and policy. Through eminently lucid and engaging prose, this book provides textured portraits of how multilingual writers draw upon their rich transnational cultural repertoires to navigate their social worlds. In doing so, it also prefigures a cosmopolitanism that is not naïve to issues of power and inequity during this period of resurgent xenophobia. A hopeful gem of a book. * Gerald Campano, University of Pennsylvania, USA *

      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgments

      1. Introduction

      2. Conceptual and Empirical Background

      3. Making Sense of Histories and Literate Legacies

      4. Literacy and Writing Discourses

      5. Writing as a Power Differential

      6. Written Texts as Organic Outgrowth of Complex Linguistic and Cultural Repertoires

      7. Social and Institutional Lived Experiences

      8. Mechanics and Practicalities

      9. Implications, Recommendations, and Potential Further Directions

      References

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