8th Edition
Theories, Models, and Practices of Literacy
Acknowledgements
Editor biographies
Preface
Section 1
Introduction: Disrupting Colonial Boundaries through Theories of Languaging
Idalia Nuñez
Chapter 1: Complicating Postcolonial Logics: Toward Transraciolinguistic Justice in Literacy Instruction
Patriann Smith, Darlshawn Patterson, and Arlette Willis
Chapter 2: Anchoring Translanguaging Theory in Our Own Testimonios
Suzanne García and Susana Ibarra Johnson
Chapter 3: Untapped Possibilities: Intersectionality Theory, Literacy Research, Teacher Education, and Teaching
Maneka Deanna Brooks and Michelle Kwok
Section 2
Introduction: Young Children’s Literacies
Misty Sailors
Chapter 4: Rethinking (Il)literate Bodies: Critical Posthumanism and Minoritized Children’s Literacies
Yeojoo Yoon
Chapter 5: Play as the Literacy of Children: Imagining Otherwise in Constrained Classrooms
Karen Wohlwend
Chapter 6: The Simple View of Reading Is Not So Simple: Fundamental Problems and Suggested Alternatives
Scott G. Paris
Section 3
Introduction: Youth Literacies
Donna E. Alvermann
Chapter 7: Afrofuturist Literacies and the Textual Geographies of Black Futures
Justin A. Coles, Princess E. Garrett, Shannon Laribo, and Imani J. Wallace
Chapter 8: Supporting Youth’s Culturally Relevant and Sustaining Peer Interactions in Literacy Teaching and Learning
Joanne E. Marciano and Katie Tasch Bielecki
Chapter 9: Playing with(in) Platforms: A Sociomaterial Perspective on Literacy and Video Games
Bradley Robinson, William Terrell Wright, and T. Philip Nichols
Chapter 10: Positioning Youth: Contemporary Waves of Theory Building in Writing and Writing Development
Anna Smith
Section 4
Introduction: Disciplinary Literacy
Misty Sailors
Chapter 11: Noticing for Equity in Disciplinary Literacy Instruction
Danny C. Martinez and Alexis Patterson Williams
Chapter 12: Reimagining Science Literacies with Performing Arts Practices: The Salience of the Body
Rebecca Woodard, Amanda R. Diaz, Nathan C. Phillips, Stephanie Batres Spezza, and Maria Varelas
Chapter 13: Broadening Theories of Disciplinary Literacy to Include Young Children
Tanya S. Wright, Lisa M. Domke, and Amelia Wenk Gotwals
Section 5
Introduction: Home and Community as Sites of Critical Literacies
Idalia Nuñez
Chapter 14: From las Semillas to el Árbol: Cultivating a Borderlands Biliteracies Framework
Idalia Nuñez, Enrique David Degollado, and Claudia Cervantes-Soon
Chapter 15: The Creative Artistry of Home as Fugitivity
Justin A. Coles, Autumn A. Griffin, and Grace D. Player
Chapter 16: A Communal Pedagogy of Resistance and Its Communal Organizing Literacies: Theorizing the Practices of Latine/x Immigrants’ Organizing
Alicia Rusoja, Yared Portillo, and Grace Cornell Gonzales
Section 6
Introduction: Literacy Teaching and Literacy Teacher Education
James V. Hoffman
Chapter 17: Radically Reimagining Teacher Education through Embodiment and Improvisation
Misty Sailors, Amanda R. Diaz, and Samuel J. Tanner
Chapter 18: Coalitional Counternarratives: Advancing Justice-Oriented Literacy Teacher Preparation through CRT Methodologies and Action Research in Collective Spaces
Brittany L. Frieson, Erin Ashcraft, and Cortney J. Haynes
Chapter 19: Third Space, Boundary Crossing, and Hybrid Space as Theoretical Frameworks for Research into Transformative Literacy Teacher Preparation
James V. Hoffman, Samual DeJulio, and Leah Durán
Section 7
Introduction: (Re)Theorizing: Reading Disabilities
James V. Hoffman
Chapter 20: A Historical Perspective on Theoretical Frameworks for Reading Disability
Dixie D. Massey
Chapter 21: Neurological Queerness: A Guiding Theoretical Framework for Justice-Oriented Dis/ability and Literacy Research
Monica C. Kleekamp
Chapter 22: Meaning-Making at the Margins: DisCrit in and through Early Literacy Research and Practice
Maggie Beneke and Emily Machado
Section 8
Introduction: Futuring, Pasts, and Presence: Digital Lives, Worlds, and Literacies
Vaughn W. M. Watson
Chapter 23: Black Girls, Blogs, and Books: Toward an Urban Digital Literacies Framework
Delicia Tiera Greene
Chapter 24: Envisioning and Enacting Rightful Literary Presence with Immigrant Youth as Everyday Teaching Practice
Jin Kyeong Jung, Vaughn W. M. Watson, and Joel E. Berends
Chapter 25: Caught Up in the Moment: Seeking Magic in Literacy Research
Hugh Escott, Samyia Ambreen, Chris Bailey, Jessica Bradley, Kate Pahl, Jennifer Rowsell, and Gemma Thornton
Section 9
Introduction: Transglobal, Multimodal Lives, Texts, and Literacies
Vaughn W. M. Watson
Chapter 26: To Play as One Does: Affirming Affective Positionalities to Address Social Justice Issues
Amélie Lemieux
Chapter 27: Thinking Together: Unsettling Knowledge Hegemonies through Intentional Epistemic Partnerships in Literacy Research and Practice
David B. Wandera
Chapter 28: African Orality and Storytelling as Theoretical Framework and Approach in Literacy Research and Education
Araba Ayiaba Ziekpor Osei-Tutu
Section 10
Introduction: Global Literacies
Donna E. Alvermann
Chapter 29: Advancing Theoretical Perspectives on Transnationalism in Literacy Research: Theorizing Inside the Racial Turn and Postsecondary Education
Allison Skerrett and Qianqian Zhang-Wu
Chapter 30: Critical Literacy, Pedagogy, and Democratic Education
Allan Luke
Chapter 31: Precarity: Theorizing Practices of Critical Media Literacy for a More Just Future
Donna E. Alvermann
List of Contributors
Index
Biography
Misty Sailors is a Professor Emeritus at the University of Texas at San Antonio and Director of Literacy Research at WestEd.
Idalia Nuñez is an Associate Professor of Language and Literacy in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
Vaughn W. M. Watson is an Associate Professor of English Education, in the Department of Teacher Education, at Michigan State University.
James V. Hoffman is a Professor Emeritus of Language and Literacy at The University of Texas at Austin.
Donna E. Alvermann is the Omer Clyde and Elizabeth Parr Aderhold Professor of Education, and Distinguished Research Professor, Emeritus, at the University of Georgia in Athens.
“This volume’s comprehensive nature and focus is its strength… I think this text would offer any researcher, whether faculty or graduate student, sure footholds for realizing excellent literacy scholarship. We need this text.”
James Joshua Coleman, Assistant Professor of English Education, University of Iowa
“The authors affirm the identities of marginalized communities by critiquing traditional literacy theories and providing considerable space in this volume to theories that support the role of identity, culture and community in literacy. In addition, the authors de-center Western literacies by giving considerable coverage to global literacies… The new edition will not only provide an excellent resource for theories and models across various contexts but also serve as a text that promotes equity and inclusion.”
Ekaterina Midgette, Associate Professor, Education Specialties, St. John’s University






