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The Native Speaker Concept

Ethnographic Investigations of Native Speaker Effects
  • Edited by: Neriko Musha Doerr
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2009
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About this book

The "native speaker" is often thought of as an ideal language user with "a complete and possibly innate competence in the language" which is perceived as being bounded and fixed to a homogeneous speech community and linked to a nation-state. Despite recent works that challenge its empirical accuracy and theoretical utility, the notion of the "native speaker" is still prevalent today.

The Native Speaker Concept shifts the analytical focus from the second language acquisition processes and teaching practices to daily interactions situated in wider sociocultural and political contexts marked by increased global movements of people and multilingual situations. Using an ethnographic approach, the volume critically elucidates the political nature of (not) claiming the "native speaker" status in daily life and the ways the ideology of "native speaker" intersects and articulates, supports, subverts, or complicates various relations of dominance and regimes of standardization.

The book offers cases from diverse settings, including classrooms in Japan, a coffee shop in Barcelona, secondary schools in South Africa, a backyard in Rapa Nui (Easter Island), restaurant kitchens, a high school administrator's office, a college classroom in the United States, and the Internet. It also offers a genealogy of the notion of the "native speaker" from the time of the Roman Empire. Employing linguistic, anthropological and educational theories, the volume speaks not only to the analyses of language use and language policy, planning, and teaching, but also to the investigation of wider effects of language ideology on relations of dominance, and institutional and discursive practices.

Author / Editor information

Neriko Musha Doerr, Ramapo College, Mahwah, USA.

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  • Part I. Setting the stage
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  • Part II. Nation-states’ designs and people’s actions
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  • Part III. Standardizing impulses and their subversions
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  • Part IV. Revisiting “competence”
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  • Part V. Moving forward
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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
December 22, 2009
eBook ISBN:
9783110220957
Hardcover published on:
December 11, 2009
Hardcover ISBN:
9783110220940
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Front matter:
10
Main content:
390
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