language resources, identities and ideologies in a globalized world /
First Statement of Responsibility
edited by Marilda C. Cavalcanti and Terezinha M. Maher.
EDITION STATEMENT
Edition Statement
First edition.
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Place of Publication, Distribution, etc.
New York :
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
Routledge,
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
2017.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Specific Material Designation and Extent of Item
1 online resource.
SERIES
Series Title
Routledge critical studies in multilingualism ;
Volume Designation
14
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
Cover -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Contemporary Brazilian Perspectives on Multilingualism: An Introduction -- Section I Politics, Language Ideologies and the Changing Shape of Language Policy Processes -- Introduction: Distinctive and Common Features of Brazilian Language and Education Policy in the Latin American Context -- 2 Changing Policies and Language Ideologies With Regard to Indigenous Languages in Brazil -- 3 Shifting Discourses About Language and Identity Among Indigenous Teachers in Western Amazonia in the Wake of Policy Change -- 4 From Foreign Languages to Brazilian Languages, From One-Language-One-Nation Ideology to Inclusive Co-officialization Policy: The Case of Hunsrückisch and Pommersch -- Section II Language-In-Education: A Dominant Monolingual Ideology in Tension With Multilingual Practices -- Introduction: Political-Ideological Issues Within Brazilian Debates and Policies on Multilingual and Multicultural Education -- 5 Representations of Deaf Identities and Communicative Repertoires: Conversations With Deaf Teachers -- 6 The Languages on the Brazilian Borders: Documenting Urban Diversity, Researching School and Classroom Practice, Working Towards Change -- 7 A Multilingual Life in Transit Between Two Monolingual Orders: A 'Braziguayan' Student, Her Linguistic Repertoire and Her Translingual Practices -- Section III Local/Global Trajectories -- Introduction: Local/Global Trajectories: Historical and Ethnographic Perspectives -- 8 The Ongoing Mobilities of Japanese-Brazilians: Language Ideology, Identities and Language Education -- 9 Language, Literacy and Religion in the Shaping of the Identities and Social Networks of Ukrainians in Brazil -- 10 Diverse Migration Trajectories, Diverse Linguistic Repertoires, Local and Transnational Ties: Arabic Speakers in Foz do Iguaçu.
Text of Note
Section IV Representation/Performance of Diversities -- Introduction: Representation/Performance of Diversities: Reflections on the 'Multi' -- 11 Guarani/Portuguese/Castellano Rap on the Borderland: Transidiomaticity, Indexicalities and Text Spectacularity -- 12 Multiliteracies and Multilingualism in Brazilian Youth Culture: The Case of Anime Music Video Editing -- Section V Internationalization and New Diversities in Higher Education: Policies and Practices 'On the Ground' -- Introduction: Affordances and Consequences of Internationalization in Higher Education: Lessons from Brazilian Case Studies -- 13 Portuguese as an Additional Language: Global Trends in Local Actions -- 14 Narrating Lived Experiences from the Margins: The Voices of Two Undergraduate Students from the Democratic Republic of Congo at a Brazilian University -- Afterword: Policies, Identities, Trajectories and Practices of Multilingual Brazil -- Contributors -- Index.
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8
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
"This book brings together cutting edge work by Brazilian researchers on plurilingualism in Brazil for an English-speaking readership in one comprehensive volume. Divided into four sections, each with its own introduction, tying together the themes of the book, the volume charts a course for a new sociolinguistics of multilingualism, challenging long-held perceptions about a monolingual Brazil by exploring the different policies, language resources, ideologies and social identities that have emerged in the country's contemporary plurilingual landscape. The book elucidates the country's linguistic history to demonstrate its evolution to its present state, a country shaped by political, economic, and cultural forces both locally and globally, and explores different facets of today's plurilingual Brazil, including youth on the margins and their cultural and linguistic practices; the educational challenges of socially marginalized groups; and minority groups' efforts to strengthen languages of identity and belonging. In addition to assembling linguistic research done in Brazil previously little known to an English-speaking readership, the book incorporates theoretical frameworks from other disciplines to provide a comprehensive picture of the social, political, and cultural dynamics at play in multilingual Brazil. This volume is key reading for researchers in linguistic anthropology, sociolinguistics, applied linguistics, cultural studies, and Latin American studies."--Provided by publisher.