1st Edition

Subaltern Linguistics A Toolkit for Alternative Education and Practice

206 Pages 78 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

206 Pages 78 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

206 Pages 78 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Subaltern Linguistics challenges the goals and theoretical foundations of colonial linguistics, academia, and education and provides alternative approaches and practices. The goal of subaltern practice is to create economies, projects, and resources that can be made and used by community members and leaders to develop and promote community beneficial projects in their own language (or a... Read more

Contents

Acknowledgements

Part I: Why do we need CREDIBLE projects?

Chapter 1: Introduction

Chapter 2: Making sense of the world

Chapter 3: Moving forward with practice

Part II: What are CREDIBLE projects?

Chapter 4: CREDIBLE projects in education

Chapter 5: CREDIBLE projects for the environment

Chapter 6: CREDIBLE projects for health and wellbeing

Chapter 7: CREDIBLE projects for economic development

Part III: How to create CREDIBLE projects

Chapter 8: How do we do CREDIBLE? – ‘The Ribbit-Ribbit Pond’

Chapter 9: Let’s do CREDIBLE together – taking care of the environment

Chapter 10: It’s now your turn to do CREDIBLE!

Part IV: Examples of CREDIBLE projects

Chapter 11: Kids Guide to Art in Camden – mapping art spaces and places

Chapter 12: Cards for Courage

Chapter 13: Gender stereotypes in fairy tales: the CREDIBLE Project's journey of designing a workshop

Chapter 14: Cantonese dialect maintenance among children

Index

Biography

Ahmar Mahboob, also known as Sunny Boy Brumby and Prof Nomad, is Associate Professor in the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Sydney, Australia. They were recognised as field leader in English language and literature by the Australian Magazine in 2019 and their poetry was inducted into the Australian Poetry Hall of Fame, Guyra, NSW, in 2021. They are the founding Editor- in- Chief of the upcoming Routledge Resource Online: English in the Real World.

Aurelie Mallet holds a PhD in Linguistics from the University of Sydney. She has a focus on medical discourse, in particular public health discourse. Her PhD utilised the principles of Positive Discourse Analysis to deconstruct and analyse Australia’s successful National Tobacco Campaign, leading to the proposal of a new campaign targeting excessive sugar. Aurelie currently works for NSW Health in the training and education of health staff.

Lee Cheng Koay holds a Master of Crosscultural and Applied Linguistics and a Master of Health Communication. With a background in educational writing and health communication, Lee Cheng is currently conducting her PhD studies to integrate CREDIBLE into the development of a health campaign, specifically on endometriosis in Malaysia.