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English as a Local Language Christina Higgins

English as a Local Language By Christina Higgins

English as a Local Language by Christina Higgins


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Summary

This book explores how multilingualism involving English is ordered in post-colonial, globalizing societies. By placing multilingual practices at the theoretical center, the author investigates a range of sociolinguistic domains to demonstrate how individuals use English as a local resource to produce an array of local and global identifications.

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English as a Local Language Summary

English as a Local Language: Post-colonial Identities and Multilingual Practices by Christina Higgins

When analyzed in multilingual contexts, English is often treated as an entity that is separable from its linguistic environment. It is often the case, however, that multilinguals use English in hybrid and transcultural ways. This book explores how multilingual East Africans make use of English as a local resource in their everyday practices by examining a range of domains, including workplace conversation, beauty pageants, hip hop and advertising. Drawing on the Bakhtinian concept of multivocality, the author uses discourse analysis and ethnographic approaches to demonstrate the range of linguistic and cultural hybridity found across these domains, and to consider the constraints on hybridity in each context. By focusing on the cultural and linguistic bricolage in which English is often found, the book illustrates how multilinguals respond to the tension between local identification and dominant conceptualizations of English as a language for global communication.

English as a Local Language Reviews

Hitherto, this field of scholarship has been dominated by the research of English as an 'international language' or 'global language' or 'world language'. But in this book, Christina Higgins jettisons that norm and brings a daring yet refreshing new voice to the debate by focusing on the appropriation of English as a local language and mapping the politics of its co-existence with indigenous languages in Kenya and Tanzania. She has developed a framework that places multilingual practices at the theoretical centre while responding brilliantly to the growing relevance of social theory in sociolinguistics.

-- Professor Tope Omoniyi, Roehampton University, UK

The author clearly has an extensive knowledge of multilingual practices around the world. Her very detailed information about the sociolinguistics of mixed languages in Tanzania and Kenya is particularly impressive.

-- Alfred Buregeya, University of Nairobi * English World-Wide 32:1, 2011 *

About Christina Higgins

Christina Higgins is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Second Language Studies, University of Hawai'i at Manoa, Honolulu, USA. Her main areas of interest are the sociopolitics of English as a global language and the sociolinguistics of multilingual societies. She has focused her research in Kenya and Tanzania, where she has investigated how multilingual individuals use English alongside their other languages to produce local and global identifications across domains such as workplace conversation, advertising, popular culture, and HIV/AIDS education.

Table of Contents

1. Multivoiced multilingualism

2. From pre-colonial beginnings to multivocality

3. Double voices in the workplace

4. Miss World or Miss Bantu? Competing dialogues on female beauty

5. The polyphony of East African hip hop

6. Selling fasta fasta in the East African marketplace

7. New wor(l)d order

Additional information

CIN1847691803G
9781847691804
1847691803
English as a Local Language: Post-colonial Identities and Multilingual Practices by Christina Higgins
Used - Good
Paperback
Channel View Publications Ltd
20090708
184
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - English as a Local Language