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Language and Social Justice
Global Perspectives (Contemporary Studies in Linguistics)

Rating
Format
Hardback, 576 pages
Published
United Kingdom, 19 February 2022

1. Introduction, Kathleen C. Riley (Rutgers University, USA), Bernard C. Perley (University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, USA) and Inmaculada M. García-Sánchez (Temple University, USA) Part I: Negotiating Resources in the 21st Century 2. Discursive Constructions of Non-Human Beings and the Moral Consideration for Wildlife, Paul B. Garrett (Temple University, USA) and Rebecca Michelin (Schuylkill Center for Environmental Education, USA) 3. Politics of Deafness and Belonging and Marginalization in Nepal, Erika Hoffmann-Dilloway (Oberlin College, USA) 4. Communicative Inequality in Papua New Guinea, Courtney Handman (University of Texas at Austin, USA) and James Slotta (University of Texas at Austin, USA) 5. Discourses of Reconciliation to Circumscribe Indigenous Resurgence in Canada, Bonnie McElhinny (University of Toronto, Canada) 6. Discursive Resistance, Communicative Refusal, and Food Provisioning in Santiago de Cuba, Hannah Garth (University of San Diego, USA) 7. Intercultural Health and Communicative Justice in Native Chile, Jennifer Guzmán (SUNY Geneseo, USA) Part II: (De)constructing Identities and Subjectivities 8. Linguistic and Ethical Dimensions of the Schooling of Immigrant Latinx Youth and Families, Ariana Mangual Figueroa (CUNY Grad Center, USA) and Sera Hernandez (San Diego State University, USA) 9. Decolonizing Deficit Ideologies and Language Socialization in Dominica and Beyond, Amy L. Paugh (James Madison University, USA) 10. Schooling, Language Learning, and the Production of a Marriageable Fulbe Girl in Northern Cameroon, Leslie Moore (Ohio State University, USA) 11. Indexicality and Intertextuality at the Intersection of Islam, Sexuality, and Gender Diversity, Katrina Daly Thompson (University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA) 12. Revisiting Linguistic Colonialism, Identity Politics, and Social Justice in the Era of Globalization, Sherina Feliciano-Santos (University of South Carolina, USA) 13. Multilingual Pathways to Sovereignty in the Pacific, Kathleen Riley (Rutgers University, USA) and Christine Jourdan (Concordia University, Canada) Part III: Confronting Hate and Violence 14. Communicative Dimensions of Peacebuilding and Reconciliation After Violence in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Keziah Conrad (University of San Diego, USA) 15. Linguistic Dimensions of Mobility and Precarity for Guatemalan Indigenous Youth, Jennifer F. Reynolds (University of South Carolina, USA) 16. Language, Social Injustice, and Parenting in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Jennifer Roth-Gordon (University of Arizona, USA) 17. Arabic and the Discursive Contours of Islamo-Linguisto-Phobia in Spain and France, Inmaculada García-Sánchez (Temple University, USA) and Chantal Tetreault (Michigan State University, USA) 18. Neoliberal Advertising as Social (In)Justice in Urban India, Kira Hall (University of Colorado, Boulder, USA) Part IV: Challenging Institutional Standards, Ideologies, and Exclusions 19. Repatriating Traditional Territories Through Indigenous Place Names, Bernard Perley (University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. USA) 20. Restorative Approach to Damaged Centered Language, Maisha Winn (UC Davis, USA) 21. Institutional-Humanitarian Fixes and Autonomy Approaches in Barcelona, Laura Menna (Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain) and Eva Codó (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain) 22. Interpreters, Interpreting and Commodification of Language in the Danish Legal System, Martha Karrebæk and Marta Kirilova (University of Copenhagen, Denmark) 23. The Social Justice and Political Economy of Seamen's Talk on Cargo Ships, Johanna Markkula (University of Oslo, Norway) 24. The Social Lives of Wenhua/Culture and the Spectre of Symbolic Violence in Chinese-English Dialogues, Fan Yang (University of Maryland, USA) 25. Multilingual Activism and Linguistic Citizenship in post-national South Africa, Quentin Williams (University of Western Cape, South Africa) 26. Vulvas, Burlesque, and Sexual/Reproductive Justice, Brittany Johnson (University of Alberta, Canada) 27. The Role of Mistranslation and Misrepresentation in the British Colonisation of Aotearoa/New Zealand, Margaret Mutu (University of Auckland, New Zealand) 28. Epilogue, Kathleen C. Riley (Rutgers University, USA), Bernard C. Perley (University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, USA) and Inmaculada M. García-Sánchez (Temple University, USA) Index

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1. Introduction, Kathleen C. Riley (Rutgers University, USA), Bernard C. Perley (University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, USA) and Inmaculada M. García-Sánchez (Temple University, USA) Part I: Negotiating Resources in the 21st Century 2. Discursive Constructions of Non-Human Beings and the Moral Consideration for Wildlife, Paul B. Garrett (Temple University, USA) and Rebecca Michelin (Schuylkill Center for Environmental Education, USA) 3. Politics of Deafness and Belonging and Marginalization in Nepal, Erika Hoffmann-Dilloway (Oberlin College, USA) 4. Communicative Inequality in Papua New Guinea, Courtney Handman (University of Texas at Austin, USA) and James Slotta (University of Texas at Austin, USA) 5. Discourses of Reconciliation to Circumscribe Indigenous Resurgence in Canada, Bonnie McElhinny (University of Toronto, Canada) 6. Discursive Resistance, Communicative Refusal, and Food Provisioning in Santiago de Cuba, Hannah Garth (University of San Diego, USA) 7. Intercultural Health and Communicative Justice in Native Chile, Jennifer Guzmán (SUNY Geneseo, USA) Part II: (De)constructing Identities and Subjectivities 8. Linguistic and Ethical Dimensions of the Schooling of Immigrant Latinx Youth and Families, Ariana Mangual Figueroa (CUNY Grad Center, USA) and Sera Hernandez (San Diego State University, USA) 9. Decolonizing Deficit Ideologies and Language Socialization in Dominica and Beyond, Amy L. Paugh (James Madison University, USA) 10. Schooling, Language Learning, and the Production of a Marriageable Fulbe Girl in Northern Cameroon, Leslie Moore (Ohio State University, USA) 11. Indexicality and Intertextuality at the Intersection of Islam, Sexuality, and Gender Diversity, Katrina Daly Thompson (University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA) 12. Revisiting Linguistic Colonialism, Identity Politics, and Social Justice in the Era of Globalization, Sherina Feliciano-Santos (University of South Carolina, USA) 13. Multilingual Pathways to Sovereignty in the Pacific, Kathleen Riley (Rutgers University, USA) and Christine Jourdan (Concordia University, Canada) Part III: Confronting Hate and Violence 14. Communicative Dimensions of Peacebuilding and Reconciliation After Violence in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Keziah Conrad (University of San Diego, USA) 15. Linguistic Dimensions of Mobility and Precarity for Guatemalan Indigenous Youth, Jennifer F. Reynolds (University of South Carolina, USA) 16. Language, Social Injustice, and Parenting in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Jennifer Roth-Gordon (University of Arizona, USA) 17. Arabic and the Discursive Contours of Islamo-Linguisto-Phobia in Spain and France, Inmaculada García-Sánchez (Temple University, USA) and Chantal Tetreault (Michigan State University, USA) 18. Neoliberal Advertising as Social (In)Justice in Urban India, Kira Hall (University of Colorado, Boulder, USA) Part IV: Challenging Institutional Standards, Ideologies, and Exclusions 19. Repatriating Traditional Territories Through Indigenous Place Names, Bernard Perley (University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. USA) 20. Restorative Approach to Damaged Centered Language, Maisha Winn (UC Davis, USA) 21. Institutional-Humanitarian Fixes and Autonomy Approaches in Barcelona, Laura Menna (Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain) and Eva Codó (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain) 22. Interpreters, Interpreting and Commodification of Language in the Danish Legal System, Martha Karrebæk and Marta Kirilova (University of Copenhagen, Denmark) 23. The Social Justice and Political Economy of Seamen's Talk on Cargo Ships, Johanna Markkula (University of Oslo, Norway) 24. The Social Lives of Wenhua/Culture and the Spectre of Symbolic Violence in Chinese-English Dialogues, Fan Yang (University of Maryland, USA) 25. Multilingual Activism and Linguistic Citizenship in post-national South Africa, Quentin Williams (University of Western Cape, South Africa) 26. Vulvas, Burlesque, and Sexual/Reproductive Justice, Brittany Johnson (University of Alberta, Canada) 27. The Role of Mistranslation and Misrepresentation in the British Colonisation of Aotearoa/New Zealand, Margaret Mutu (University of Auckland, New Zealand) 28. Epilogue, Kathleen C. Riley (Rutgers University, USA), Bernard C. Perley (University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, USA) and Inmaculada M. García-Sánchez (Temple University, USA) Index

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Product Details
EAN
9781350156241
ISBN
1350156248
Dimensions
24.4 x 16.9 x 2.5 centimeters (0.45 kg)

Table of Contents

List of Figures List of Tables List of Contributors Acknowledgements Introduction: Global Entanglements of Language and Social Justice, Inmaculada M. García-Sánchez (University of California, USA), Kathleen C. Riley (Rutgers University, USA) and Bernard C. Perley (University of British Columbia, Canada) Part I: Challenging Linguistic Ideologies and Exclusions 1. A Language Socialization Approach to Humanizing Ethnographic Methods in Latinx Families’ Homes, Ariana Mangual Figueroa (City University of New York, USA) and Sera Hernández (San Diego State University, USA) 2. Language Access and Deaf Activism in Mexico and Nepal,Erika Hoffmann-Dilloway (Oberlin College, USA) and Anne E. Pfister (University of North Florida, USA) 3. Multilingual Activism as Acts of Linguistic Citizenship in South Africa, Quentin Williams (University of the Western Cape, South Africa) 4. Colonialism and Language Politics in Puerto Rico, Sherina Feliciano-Santos (University of Michigan, USA) 5. Labels, Codes, and Language Sovereignty in the Pacific, Kathleen C. Riley (Rutgers University, USA) and Christine Jourdan (Concordia University, Canada) Commentary, Patricia Baquedano-López (University of California, USA) Part II: Confronting Hate and Violence 6. The Humpty Dumpty Mistranslation and Misrepresentation Deployed in the British Colonization of Aotearoa/New Zealand, Margaret Mutu (University of Auckland, New Zealand) 7. The Linguistic Defense of White Comfort in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Jennifer Roth-Gordon (University of Arizona, USA) 8. (Con)sensual Sexual and Reproductive Justice for Indigenous Women and Girls through Beadwork and Burlesque, Brittany Johnson (MacEwan University, Canada) 9. Telling Truths, Keeping Silence in the Aftermath of War in Sarajevo, Keziah Conrad 10. Arabic and the Discursive Contours of Islamo-Linguistic-Phobia in Spain and France, Inmaculada M. García-Sánchez (University of California, USA) and Chantal Tetreault (Michigan State University, USA) Commentary, Luisa Martín-Rojo (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain) Part III: Decoding Globalized Interactions 11. Seafarers' Talk about (In)Justice on the “Good Ship”, Johanna Markkula (Central European University) and Sonia Das (New York University, USA) 12. Barcelona Street Vendors’ Voice and the Crossing of Narrative (B)Orders, Laura Menna (Independent Researcher) and Eva Codó (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain) 13. Interdiscursive Dimensions of Mobility and Precarity for Guatemalan Indigenous Youth, Jennifer F. Reynolds (University of South Carolina, USA) 14. Regimes of Organization in Danish Legal Interpreting, Martha Karrebæk (University of Copenhagen, Denmark) and Marta Kirilova (University of Copenhagen, Denmark) 15. Keywords Decolonized? The Social Lives of Wenhua/Culture and the Spectre of Symbolic Violence in Chinese-English Dialogues, Louisa Schein (Rutgers University, USA)and Fan Yang (University of Maryland, USA) Commentary, Miyako Inoue (Stanford University, USA) Part IV: Negotiating Resources in the Anthropocene 16. Global Languages and Communicative Inequality in the “Last Place” on Earth, James Slotta (University of Texas, USA) and Courtney Handman (University of Texas, USA) 17. Pursuit of Health/Communicative Justice through an Intercultural Health Model in Gulumapu (Chile), Jennifer Guzmán (SUNY Geneseo, USA) 18. Inscribing Social Justice through Indigenous Place Names, Bernard C. Perley (University of British Columbia, Canada) 19. Discursive Resistance, Communicative Refusal, and Food Provisioning in Santiago de Cuba, Hannah Garth (Princeton University, USA) 20. Discursive Constructions of Non-Human Beings and the Contingency of Moral Consideration for Local Wildlife, Paul B. Garrett (Temple University, USA) and Rebecca Michelin (Independent Researcher) Commentary, Barbra Meek (University of Michigan, USA) Index

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Explores how language both facilitates and undermines social justice in complex ways around the globe, through a broad range of international case studies.

About the Author

Kathleen C. Riley is Assistant Teaching Professor of Linguistic Anthropology at Rutgers University, USA. Bernard C. Perley is Associate Professor and Director of the Institute for Critical Indigenous Studies at the University of British Columbia, Canada. Inmaculada M. García-Sánchez isProfessor of Social Research Methodology and Associate Director of the Center for the Study of International Migration at the University of California, Los Angeles, USA.

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