The racialized nature of academic language: disentangling raciolinguistic power structures

Research output: Book/ReportEdited bookpeer-review

Abstract

This book explores the marginalization that English as additional language (EAL) learners, immigrant or language-minoritized people confront when learning to socialize into using the language of schooling. The authors examine racialized academic language not to dismiss it, but to scrutinize its presence and impact on individuals' lives. Beginning with connections between eugenics, intelligence, whiteness, language, monolingualism and bilingualism, it then reviews current practices, and how the construction of academic language in various schooling and non-schooling contexts creates hegemonic structures that perpetuate deficit perspectives. The final section envisions what could help dismantle the power knots that academic language holds in systemic structures. This is a vital book for teachers, teacher educators, and policy makers who refuse the deficiency orientations placed on non-standardized use of language at schools and want to deconstruct the power that academic standardized language holds in the lives of language-minoritized students.

Original languageEnglish
PublisherBloomsbury Academic
Number of pages264
ISBN (Electronic)9781350349469
ISBN (Print)9781350349452
Publication statusPublished - 31 Oct 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© Sultan Turkan, Jamie L. Schissel 2025. All rights reserved.

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Social Sciences
  • General Arts and Humanities

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