1st Edition

Language as a Local Practice

By Alastair Pennycook Copyright 2010
    176 Pages
    by Routledge

    176 Pages
    by Routledge

    Language as a Local Practice addresses the questions of language, locality and practice as a way of moving forward in our understanding of how language operates as an integrated social and spatial activity.

    By taking each of these three elements – language, locality and practice – and exploring how they relate to each other, Language as a Local Practice opens up new ways of thinking about language. It questions assumptions about languages as systems or as countable entities, and suggests instead that language emerges from the activities it performs. To look at language as a practice is to view language as an activity rather than a structure, as something we do rather than a system we draw on, as a material part of social and cultural life rather than an abstract entity.

    Language as a Local Practice draws on a variety of contexts of language use, from bank machines to postcards, Indian newspaper articles to fish-naming in the Philippines, urban graffiti to mission statements, suggesting that rather than thinking in terms of language use in context, we need to consider how language, space and place are related, how language creates the contexts where it is used, how languages are the products of socially located activities and how they are part of the action.

    Language as a Local Practice will be of interest to students on advanced undergraduate and post graduate courses in Applied Linguistics, Language Education, TESOL, Literacy and Cultural Studies.

    1. Introduction: Language as a Local Practice  2. 'Press 1 for English': Practice as the ‘Generic Social Thing’  3. The Reverend on Ice Again: Similarity, Difference and Relocalization  4. Talking in the City: The Linguistic Landscaping of Locality  5. Kerala Tuskers: Language as Already Local 6. Alibangbang and Ecologies of Local Language Practices.  7 "Molding Hearts… Leading Minds… Touching Lives" Practice as the new discourse?  8. Conclusion: Language as a Local Practice  

      

    Biography

    Alastair Pennycook

    "Language as a Local Practice is one of the most refreshing linguistics books to appear in a decade. Weaving together different strands of current research, Alastair Pennycook provides new framings and directions for the study of language." - David Barton, University of Lancaster , UK