1st Edition

Multimodality across Epistemologies in Second Language Research

Edited By Amanda Brown, Søren W. Eskildsen Copyright 2024
346 Pages 42 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

346 Pages 42 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

346 Pages 42 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This collection highlights diverse epistemological perspectives in original research on the important role of multimodality in second language contexts. The volume explores a wide range of theoretical and methodological traditions toward foregrounding the notion that bodily action is not merely an add-on to the modality of talk but an integral part of second language teaching, learning, and... Read more

List of Contributors

 

Chapter 1: An Introduction to Multimodality across Epistemologies in Second Language Research, Søren W. Eskildsen and Amanda Brown

Part I: Classroom settings

Chapter 2: Gesture as a Means for Communicating and Understanding Embodied Conceptualizations in Second Language Interactions, Silva Ladewig and Jana Bressem

 

Chapter 3: Language, Embodiment, and the Material Ecology: Embodied and Material Resources for Repairs in Second Language Interactions, Søren W. Eskildsen and Johannes Wagner

 

Chapter 4: Multimodality and Contingency Teaching: Promoting Interactive Read-alouds for Elementary Second Language Learners., Alessandro Rosborough and Jennifer J. Wimmer

 

Chapter 5: How Flexible Seating Redefines the Place of the Body in the Language Classroom, Marion Tellier

 

Chapter 6: Learning to Embody the Teacher, Keli D. Yerian and Marion Tellier

 

Chapter 7: Conflicting Deictic Gestures in EFL Classrooms: Their Frequency, Mechanisms, and Learner Perception, Nobuhiro Kamiya

 

Chapter 8: Multimodal and Materially Embedded Meaning in L2 Interaction: Explaining and Understanding New Vocabulary, Søren W. Eskildsen

 

Chapter 9: The Effectiveness of Hand Gestures on the Development of L2 French Pronunciation, Solène Inceoglu and Ruri Ueda

 

Chapter 10: A Comparison of Gesture Production in L1 and L2 During a Video-mediated Task-based Teletandem Interaction, Benjamin Holt

Part II: Non-classroom settings

Chapter 11: Gesture Shape and Gesture-speech Alignment Predict Simultaneous L2 Sound Production Accuracy, Peng Li, Florence Baills, Xiaotong Xi, and Pilar Prieto

 

Chapter 12: Patterned Iconicity for Second Language Acquisition: Differential Effects of Gesture Type on Lexical Category, Tasha N. Lewis, Matthew W. Kirkhart, and Elise Stickles

 

Chapter 13: Does Gesture Help L2 English Users Interpret Ambiguous Sentences with Quantification and Negation?, Amanda Brown and Masaaki Kamiya

 

Chapter 14: Predicting Gesture Use among Bilingual and Monolingual Children

Lauren Daley, Eugenia Gokhman, Christina Pechey, and Elena Nicoladis

 

Chapter 15: What Speech and Gesture Illustrate About the Thinking-for-Speaking Patterns of Child isiXhosa Speakers Learning English, Gale Stam, Heather Brookes, and Unathi Ngumbela

Chapter 16: Predictors of Gesture Viewpoint in L2: A Generalized Linear Mixed Models Analysis, Christopher Hromalik and Amanda Brown

 

Chapter 17: What Does Gesture Size Tell Us about L2 Language Acquisition and Use? Gestures Accompanying Ideophones in L2 Japanese, Keiko Yoshioka and Noriko Iwasaki

 

Chapter 18: Gesturing the Discourse Marker Entonces in Native Speakers and Learners of Spanish, Renia Lopez-Ozieblo

 

Chapter 19: How ESL Speakers Use Gestures in Conversation and in Storytelling, Elena Nicoladis, Fajar Khan, and Xiaoting Li

 

Chapter 20: A Concluding Synthesis for Multimodality across Epistemologies in Second Language Research, Amanda Brown and Søren Wind Eskildsen

 

Index

 

Biography

Amanda Brown is Associate Professor of Linguistics and Director of the Linguistic Studies Program at Syracuse University, USA. She investigates the psycholinguistic effects of multicompetence and associated implications for gesture, language pedagogy and assessment, language across the curriculum, and (equity in) language teacher preparation.

Søren W. Eskildsen is Associate Professor at the Department of Design, Media and Educational Science, University of Southern Denmark. His research interests concern interactional processes and practices in L2 learning in situ and over time, approached from the perspective of usage-based linguistics and multimodal conversation analysis. He works with in- and out-of-class data.