This article locates and critiques monolingual discourses within applied performance praxis in the United Kingdom and South Africa, suggesting starting points for facilitating multilingual actors’ vast linguistic resources. Set out as a theorized reflection of praxis, I interrogate how the facilitator can draw from actors’ linguistic resources without perpetuating dominant and potentially damaging language ideologies, by which I refer to the socially shared beliefs about language that shape and are shaped by language use. I discuss the powerful language ideologies connected to so-called ‘standard’ English and constructed by dominant institutions to discover how they are reproduced in performance praxis. I also analyse performance examples e...
This article aims to raise some general questions related to mobility and the traffic between langua...
This essay examines the relationship of national language policies to ground-level language practice...
In their position paper “Superdiversity and language,” Blommaert & Rampton (2011) assert that “named...
This article locates and critiques monolingual discourses within applied performance praxis in the U...
This article locates and critiques monolingual discourses within applied performance praxis in the U...
Ideologies of monolingualism sustain three interrelated and seemingly fundamental assumptions about ...
This presentation is concerned with the impact of multilingualism on forced migrants’ trajectories. ...
The article explores complementary aspects of two nascent developments in (socio) linguistics, namel...
This presentation is concerned with the impact of multilingualism on forced migrants’ trajectories. ...
© 2019, © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This paper traces recent the...
While there have been significant paradigm shifts in conceptualising language in appliedlinguistics ...
The turn to multilingualism due to the complex dynamics of globalization, global migration and multi...
This article is the guest editors’ introduction to the special issue ‘Language in Epistemic Access: ...
This article is the guest editors’ introduction to the special issue ‘Language in Epistemic Access: ...
This article considers issues of language use in South Africa with regard to some salient discursive...
This article aims to raise some general questions related to mobility and the traffic between langua...
This essay examines the relationship of national language policies to ground-level language practice...
In their position paper “Superdiversity and language,” Blommaert & Rampton (2011) assert that “named...
This article locates and critiques monolingual discourses within applied performance praxis in the U...
This article locates and critiques monolingual discourses within applied performance praxis in the U...
Ideologies of monolingualism sustain three interrelated and seemingly fundamental assumptions about ...
This presentation is concerned with the impact of multilingualism on forced migrants’ trajectories. ...
The article explores complementary aspects of two nascent developments in (socio) linguistics, namel...
This presentation is concerned with the impact of multilingualism on forced migrants’ trajectories. ...
© 2019, © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This paper traces recent the...
While there have been significant paradigm shifts in conceptualising language in appliedlinguistics ...
The turn to multilingualism due to the complex dynamics of globalization, global migration and multi...
This article is the guest editors’ introduction to the special issue ‘Language in Epistemic Access: ...
This article is the guest editors’ introduction to the special issue ‘Language in Epistemic Access: ...
This article considers issues of language use in South Africa with regard to some salient discursive...
This article aims to raise some general questions related to mobility and the traffic between langua...
This essay examines the relationship of national language policies to ground-level language practice...
In their position paper “Superdiversity and language,” Blommaert & Rampton (2011) assert that “named...