
Negotiating Gendered Language and Social Identities
Gender, Race and Native Speaker Ideology in Learning Japanese as an Additional Language
- 232 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Negotiating Gendered Language and Social Identities
Gender, Race and Native Speaker Ideology in Learning Japanese as an Additional Language
About this book
This book explores gendered language and gender identities negotiated by seven tertiary students of Japanese as an additional language (JAL) in Australia. It demonstrates that while participants are familiar with gendered Japanese as linguistic resources, their self- positioned and ascribed 'learnersness', 'nonnative-speakerness' and 'non- Japaneseness' both inside and outside classroom contexts greatly impact the targeted negotiations. It argues that these ascribed social identities encourage participants to adopt 'correct' (gendered) Japanese; however, what exactly this 'correctness' means differs for each JAL participant, depending on their other reflective and perceived social identitiesāsuch as gender, age, class, race and English 'native- speakerness'.
This book draws on the conclusions on the implications of discourses and practices concerning native- speaker status, gender and race in Japanese language education. While the initial focus is on gendered Japanese and gender identity, this book subsequently expands that the participants' negotiation of gendered Japanese and gender identity is complicatedly intertwined with negotiations of other social identities such as native- speaker status, race and age, with native-speaker status saliently affecting the way they position themselves and are positioned by their interlocutors. This book analyses the participants' language resources, spoken and/ or written Japanese interactions and one-on-one and focus- group interviews and presents easily understood findings for readers who are interested in SLA, Japanese, language and/ or identity studies.
This is the first book to holistically examine Australia- based tertiary students' Japanese language learning experience and Japanese interactions with regards to (gendered) language, identities and discursive power relations in a global and multilingual world.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half-Title Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Gendered Japanese, Gender Identities and Gender Ideologies: Learning Japanese in the Time of Globalisation and Accelerated Unequal Power Relations
- 3 JAL Participantsā Negotiation of Gendered Language and Gender Identities
- 4 Language and Gender Ideologies and āLearners of Japaneseā
- 5 JAL Participantsā Social Identities and Discursive Power Relations: Intersections of āNativenessā, āGenderā, āClassā, āAgeā and āRaceā
- 6 Conclusion
- Details of Pre-recorded Interactions
- Questions for JAL participantsā diary entry
- Template of Questionnaire
- Gendered Linguistic Features Used as Stimuli in One-on-One Semi-structured Interviews
- Conventions Employed for the Transcriptions in the Current Study
- Index