Language ideology and power
Material type:
- 9788125034636
- 306.44095491 RAH
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Gandhi Smriti Library | 306.44095491 RAH (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 147851 |
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306.44082 DEF Communicating gender diversity: critical approach | 306.440954 LAN Language in South Asia | 306.44095491 AYR Speaking like a state | 306.44095491 RAH Language ideology and power | 306.4409756 HEA Words at work and play: three decades in family and community life | 306.446 BIL Bilingualism and identity: spanish at crossroads with other languages | 306.446 NEG Negotiating glocalization |
This is the first book-length study of the history of language teaching and learning among South Asian Muslims. It traces the history of language-teaching among the Muslims of north India and present-day Pakistan, and then relates language-learning (the demand) and teaching (the supply) to ideology (or world view) and power. It makes the point that the Muslims in this part of the world, like other people elsewhere, learned languages to empower themselves by acquiring marketable linguistic skills at all periods of history. It also argues that those who determine what languages, and what textbooks, are to be taught, would like to, and are in a position to promote the ideology which, in their opinion, promotes or consolidates their own power, or maintains the status quo. In short, the teaching and learning of languages is linked to the distribution of power which, in turn, is connected to employment, promotion of certain ideologies, shaping of identities, and national interest.
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