This article identifies some discursive processes by which White, middle-class, native-English-speaking, U.S.-born college students draw on a monolingualist ideology and position themselves and others within a language-race-nationality matrix. These processes construct the speakers\u27 Whiteness and nativeness in English as unmarked and normal; mark nonnative speakers of English as non-White and foreign; and naturalize connections between language, national origin, and race. I argue that dominant ways of talking about race in the United States persist as templates for creating arguments about language. Ideological models are projected onto each other, recursively reproducing a hierarchical social order in which U.S.-born citizens, native En...
In this paper, I discuss the intersection of linguistic and racial hierarchies for English language ...
361 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2008.On the basis of evidence from...
This study focuses on how attitudes in the U.S. towards native English, non-native English, and othe...
This article identifies some discursive processes by which White, middle-class, native-English-speak...
This article explores how national identities are constructed through language by examining the acce...
This study draws upon Flores and Rosa’s (2015) raciolinguistic ideologies to investigate the extent ...
Despite its imprecision, the native-nonnative dichotomy has become the dominant paradigm for categor...
The notion of (anti) racism in applied linguistics in general and in language education in particula...
As sociolinguists have long noted, racial hierarchies in the United States have been maintained thro...
The notion of ‘race ’ has often been invoked in linguistics either to dispel social biases or to exp...
grantor: University of TorontoThe "native speaker of English" is such a powerful construc...
With white supremacist discourses on the rise in recent years, it is important to investigate the id...
This paper argues that employing the designations “native speaker ” and “native language” unreflecti...
In this article, we examine the hierarchization of international students by bringing together persp...
This article explores relationships between Englishness and racialisation in order to consider the p...
In this paper, I discuss the intersection of linguistic and racial hierarchies for English language ...
361 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2008.On the basis of evidence from...
This study focuses on how attitudes in the U.S. towards native English, non-native English, and othe...
This article identifies some discursive processes by which White, middle-class, native-English-speak...
This article explores how national identities are constructed through language by examining the acce...
This study draws upon Flores and Rosa’s (2015) raciolinguistic ideologies to investigate the extent ...
Despite its imprecision, the native-nonnative dichotomy has become the dominant paradigm for categor...
The notion of (anti) racism in applied linguistics in general and in language education in particula...
As sociolinguists have long noted, racial hierarchies in the United States have been maintained thro...
The notion of ‘race ’ has often been invoked in linguistics either to dispel social biases or to exp...
grantor: University of TorontoThe "native speaker of English" is such a powerful construc...
With white supremacist discourses on the rise in recent years, it is important to investigate the id...
This paper argues that employing the designations “native speaker ” and “native language” unreflecti...
In this article, we examine the hierarchization of international students by bringing together persp...
This article explores relationships between Englishness and racialisation in order to consider the p...
In this paper, I discuss the intersection of linguistic and racial hierarchies for English language ...
361 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2008.On the basis of evidence from...
This study focuses on how attitudes in the U.S. towards native English, non-native English, and othe...