This collection explores the critical decolonial practices of applied linguistics researchers from Latin America and the Latin American diaspora, shedding light on the processes of epistemological decolonization and moving from a monolingual to a multilingual stance.
This collection explores the critical decolonial practices of applied linguistics researchers from Latin America and the Latin American diaspora, shedding light on the processes of epistemological decolonization and moving from a monolingual to a multilingual stance.
The volume brings together participants from an AILA 2021 symposium, in which researchers reflected on applied linguistics in Latin America, and on the ways in which it brought concerns around social justice, the legacy of coloniality, and the role of monolingual English in education to the fore. Each chapter is composed of four parts: an autobiographical section written both in Spanish or Portuguese and in English followed by a reflection on the epistemological differences between versions; a discussion in English of the research project; a critical reflection on the epistemic practices and critical pedagogies enacted in the project; and the author(s) understanding of the concept of decolonization and recommendations for further decolonizing the monolingual mindset of language teachers and learners. At once linguistic, epistemological, and political, the collection aims to diversify the concept of decoloniality itself and showcase other ways in which decolonial thought can be implemented in language education.
This book will be of interest to scholars in applied linguistics, sociolinguistics, and language education.
List of Contributors
Foreword
Kyria Finardi
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Exploring the decolonial challenge: Critical pedagogy and epistemological
translation in applied linguistic research in Latin America.
Claire Kramsch, Harold Castańeda-Peńa & Paola Gamboa
Part I
Exploring coloniality in applied linguistic theory and practice
1 The syntax of marginalization in Colombian Language policies: From
colonialism to neoliberalism.
Helena Guerrero Nieto
2 On being critical: Language ideologies and the (de)stabilization of the
colonial logic in a Brazilian education policy
Paula Tatiana Carréra Szundy and Rogério Casanovas Tilio
3 (Re)reading narratives and dancing in language education from (de)colonial
perspectives
Nara Hiroko Takaki
Part II
Critical pedagogies for pre- and in-service teachers
4 A critical intercultural approach to decolonize foreign language teaching
in Colombia: Explorations with teachers and Afro-Colombian and Indigenous
learners in a public university.
Janeth Marķa Ortiz Medina and Maure Carolina Aguirre Ortega
5 Reflecting on a community service-learning project for English learners in
Argentina from a decolonial perspective.
Gabriela N. Tavella and S. Carina Fernįndez
6 Non-normative corporeal-ity-ies in language education
Harold Castańeda-Peńa and Diego Ubaque-Casallas
Part III
Epistemological translations from the Latin American diaspora
7 A plurilingual MOOC to engage reflexivity, criticality and multimodality in
educational practices. Questioning coloniality and cultural and linguistic
mindsets.
Paola Andrea Gamboa Diaz
8 Onward to Pquyquy (or thinking with the heart) : Conceptualizing the
decolonization of being for language teaching and research
Yecid Ortega
9 La Lucha Sigue! Decolonizing College Composition Classrooms in Latinx
California
A.Lane Igoudin
Conclusion
Towards a new framework for decolonizing practice: The multilingual mindset.
Harold Castańeda-Peńa, Paola Gamboa and Claire Kramsch
Index
Harold Castańeda-Peńa is Associate Professor in the Doctorado Interinstitucional en Educación at Universidad Distrital Francisco José de Caldas, Colombia.
Paola Gamboa is Assistant Lecturer in the Department of French as a Foreign Language at the Sorbonne Nouvelle University, France.
Claire Kramsch is Emerita Professor of German and Affiliate Professor of Education at the University of California at Berkeley, USA.