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E-grāmata: Standards, Stigma, Surveillance: Raciolinguistic Ideologies and England's Schools

  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 12-Nov-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Palgrave Macmillan
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783031178917
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 12-Nov-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Palgrave Macmillan
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783031178917

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This book traces raciolinguistic ideologies in England’s schools, focusing on post- 2010 policy reforms which frame the language practices of low-income, racialised speakers as limited and deficient. Across interviews, policy mechanisms and classroom observations, the author shows how raciolinguistic ideologies are rooted in British colonial logics which continue to shape contemporary education policy. He shows how these policies require marginalised speakers to modify their speech patterns in line with normative standards of whiteness under new guises of social justice and research robustness. Finally, new visions for language education and linguistic justice are offered, demonstrating how teachers can see themselves as language activists to identify, resist and reject faults in a hostile and oppressive policy architecture. This book draws on fields including critical language policy, educational sociolinguistics, genealogy, raciolinguistics and critical language awareness.

Recenzijas

The book is a fearless and much-needed exploration of the topic that certainly provides much fuel for the conversation the author set out to provoke. Teachers in all settings (schools, further and higher education) would have much to gain from engaging with Cushings arguments, as would fellow researchers, and not only for its obvious relevance to the field of language and education, but also because of its rich and purposefully considered use of various methods and methodologies. (Frank Monaghan, Applied Linguistics, November 20, 2024)





This book offers compelling insights into how standard language and raciolinguistic ideologies shape contemporary education policy in schools across England. ... The book provides a very detailed historical overview of the sociopolitical structures, institutions, and state-level mechanisms which craft a narrative of linguistic deprivation around minoritized speakers. ... The sheer scope of this book and the new vision of language education it proposes, makes this book an essential text for both educational practitioners and policymakers alike. (Katie Mansfield, Language in Society, Vol. 53 (2), 2024)





I urge you to read Cushings very timely book, but before doing so, read Mulwas startling novel. This is because, read together, they show how colonial history is returning, even in the guts of the ex-colonisers own schools in the midst of our cities. It is a truth which British Toryism welcomes and applauds with the cruel hubris of vicious imperial nostalgia. (Chris Searle, Morning Star, morningstaronline.co.uk, March 13, 2023)

1 The Durability of Language Ideologies
1(22)
Banned Words
1(3)
Post-2010 Policy Landscape and Long Histories of Linguistic Racism
4(6)
Raciolinguistic Positions
10(1)
Theoretical Anchor Points
11(3)
Interlocking Structures of Linguistic Inequality
14(1)
Structure of This Book
15(3)
References
18(5)
2 Language Policy: From Ideology to Inequality
23(36)
Language Policy and the Fabrics of Power
23(3)
Mechanisms and Dense Webs of Policy
26(1)
Language Ideology Within Policy
27(2)
From Ideology to Inequality
29(1)
Standard Language Category Making
30(4)
Destandardising Standards
34(1)
Raciolinguistic Ideologies and the White Listening Subject
35(4)
Schools, Standards and the Naturalisation of Language Ideologies
39(1)
Schools, Standards and Linguistic Suppression
40(3)
Surveillance in Schools
43(2)
Sonic Surveillance
45(2)
Panlinguistic Surveillance
47(2)
Language Ideology Webs
49(1)
Summary
50(1)
References
51(8)
3 Tracing Language Ideologies
59(18)
Doing Messy Language Policy Research
59(1)
A Genealogy of Standard Language and Raciolinguistic Ideologies
60(2)
Layers, Rhizomes and Policy Power
62(2)
Strands of Data
64(3)
`National' Level
67(1)
`Local' Level
68(2)
`Individual' Level
70(2)
New Urban Academy
72(2)
Archival Work
74(1)
Summary
74(1)
References
75(2)
4 State-Level Mechanisms of Sonic Surveillance
77(48)
Raciolinguistic Foundations
77(1)
`Raising Standards' and Curriculum `Reform'
78(5)
Urban Decline, Educational Failure and Criminalised Speech
83(5)
Policy Mechanisms of the State Listening Subject
88(1)
A `Knowledge Curriculum'
89(3)
Language and Discipline in Curriculum 2014
92(2)
Language Ideologies and Curriculum 2014
94(2)
Glossing Standardised English
96(3)
Mechanisms of Standard Language Assessment
99(2)
Emergence of the Tests
101(2)
Standardising Language, Standardising Teachers
103(4)
Sonic Inspection and the White Ears of the Inspectorate
107(1)
Raciolinguistic Ideologies and the Foundational Work of the Inspectorate
108(3)
Ofsted, Sonic Surveillance and Post-2010 Reforms
111(2)
The Sonic Surveillance of Teachers
113(2)
The Sonic Surveillance of Students
115(2)
Dense Webs of Sonic Surveillance
117(1)
Summary
118(1)
References
119(6)
5 Doing and Living Language Policy in Schools
125(40)
Language Ideologies in Policy and Teachers as Policy Makers
125(1)
Language Ideologies and Intertextuality
126(1)
Persistent Offenders
127(4)
Appropriateness and Elitism
131(2)
Punishing Words: Modelling, Correcting and Policing
133(7)
Sonic Surveillance in the School
140(1)
Public Shaming and Systems of Sonic Surveillance
141(4)
A `Quiet Word': Sonic Surveillance on the Sly
145(2)
Phono(un)aesthetics and Raciolinguistic Cacophony
147(2)
Looking Good, Sounding Right
149(2)
Looking Good, Sounding White
151(4)
Double Standards, Language Policies for the Body and Embodied Gentrification
155(2)
Raciolinguistic Resistance
157(3)
Summary
160(1)
References
160(5)
6 Bad Behaviour, Bad Bodies, Bad Language
165(38)
Discipline and Parlance
165(4)
Language, Law and Order
169(3)
Discipline and Language in New Urban Academy
172(5)
Filling Gaps and Plugging Holes
177(7)
`Champion Teachers' and a Language Policy for Control
184(2)
SLANTing, SPEAKing and Language Policing
186(4)
Enacting Sonic Surveillance
190(1)
Language as a Sorting Mechanism
191(3)
Academic Language and the Making of `Scholars'
194(3)
Summary
197(1)
References
197(6)
7 Raciolinguistic (Re) Resistance and Building Alternative Worlds
203(40)
Raciolinguistic Resistance and New Ways of Listening
203(3)
Agitate, Educate, Organise
206(3)
Figures of Resistance
209(1)
Teachers as Policy Agents: Narratives of Raciolinguistic Resistance
210(5)
Resisting Raciolinguistic Segregation
215(2)
Teachers as Activists
217(1)
Raciolinguistic Literacies
218(2)
Raciolinguistic Literacies in Action
220(1)
Literature and Building Alternative Worlds
220(1)
Kelly Yang's Front Desk
221(4)
Normalisation and Internalisation of Raciolinguistic Ideologies
225(4)
Interrogating the White Listening Subject
229(4)
Institutions and Intersections
233(5)
Summary
238(1)
References
238(5)
8 Conclusions: Standards, Stigma, Surveillance
243(8)
Language, Power and (in)Equality
243(1)
Standardised English and the Sonic Encoding of White Supremacy
244(2)
Language Policing as a Structure: Systems of Perpetual Surveillance
246(1)
Futures of Raciolinguistic Resistance
247(2)
References
249(2)
Index 251
Ian Cushing is Senior Lecturer in English and Education at Edge Hill University, UK. His work examines the ways in which language ideologies get transformed into policies and pedagogies, and how these work against marginalised groups. His work has appeared in journals such as Language in Society, Language Policy, British Educational Research Journal and Critical Inquiry in Language Studies.