1st Edition

Grassroots Literacy Writing, Identity and Voice in Central Africa

By Jan Blommaert Copyright 2008
    240 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    236 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    What effect has globalization had on our understanding of literacy? Grassroots Literacy seeks to address the relationship between globalization and the widening gap between ‘grassroots’ literacies, or writings from ordinary people and local communities, and ‘elite’ literacies.

    Displaced from their original context to elite literacy environments in the form of letters, police declarations and pieces of creative writing, ‘grassroots’ literacies are unsurprisingly easily disqualified, either as ‘bad’ forms of literacy, or as messages that fail to be understood. Through close analysis of two unique, handwritten documents from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Jan Blommaert considers how ‘grassroots’ literacy in the Third World develops outside the literacy-saturated environments of the developed world. In examining these documents produced by socially and economically marginalized writers Blommaert demonstrates how literacy environments should be understood as relatively autonomous systems.

    Grassroots Literacy will be key reading for students of language and literacy studies as well as an invaluable resource for anyone with an interest in understanding the implications of globalization on local literacy practices.

    Table of Contents

    Preface

    PART 1: GRASSROOTS LITERACY

    1. Introduction: Grassroots literacy and literacy regimes

    1.1. Yes I can write

    1.2. Writing

    1.3. Grassroots literacy

    1.4. Ethnographies of text

    1.5. Globalization

    PART 2: THE LIVES OF JULIEN

    2. Three lives for Mrs Arens

    2.1. Three versions of a life

    2.2. Writing with an accent

    2.3. Julien’s life: a storyline

    2.4. Writing (as) a (way of) life

    2.5. Context and pretext

    3. Genres and repertoires

    3.1. Resources

    3.2. On genre

    3.3. Emerging genres in an emerging tradition

    3.4. Histories and letters

    3.5. The repertoire

    3.6. The misfit

    4. Writing, remembering and being

    4.1. Emerging genres, emerging lives

    4.2. Writing and remembering

    4.3. Who is Julien?

    4.4. Textuality and subjectivity

    PART 3: TSHIBUMBA THE HISTORIAN

    5. Tshibumba: Artist, painter, historian

    5.1. Paintings, conversations, and texts

    5.2. Tshibumba Kanda Matulu

    5.3. The storyline

    6. The aesthetics of grassroots literacy

    6.1. Writing as drawing

    6.2. Tshibumba’s writing and drawing

    6.3. Tshibumba’s voice

    6.4. A disciplined voice

    7. Sources as resources

    7.1. The archive again

    7.2. A national history with local resources

    7.3. Tshibumba’s voices

    8. The grassroots historian’s craft

    8.1. Tshibumba’s historiographic methodology

    8.2. Grassroots historiography and popular consciousness

    8.3. Artist, painter, grassroots historian

    PART 4: JULIEN, TSHIBUMBA AND BEYOND

    9. Reflections

    9.1. Lives, literacy, subjectivity

    9.2. The skeleton of literacy practices

    9.3. Grassroots literacy in globalization

    9.4. History from below

    9.5. Conclusion

    NOTES & REFERENCES

    Biography

    Jan Blommaert is Distinguished Professor of Linguistic Anthropology at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland, as well as Professor of Linguistic Anthropology at Tilburg University. His publications include Debating Diversity (co-author, Routledge, 1998), Language Ideological Debates (editor, 1999) and Discourse: A Critical Introduction (author, 2005).