Developing Multilingual Writing: Agency, Audience, Identity: Multilingual Education, cartea 42
Autor Hiroe Kobayashi, Carol Rinnerten Limba Engleză Paperback – 15 feb 2024
The within-writer, cross-sectional text analysis (Chapters 2-5) examines 185 essays written in Japanese and English by eight groups of writers from novice to advanced (N=103), supplemented by insights from these writers’ reflections. We explore how they employ three kinds of text features (discourse types, metadiscourse, and self-representation), which relate to their developing agency, audience, and writer identity in their text construction, and propose a new model for writer voice construction based on those features. The four case studies (Chapters 6-9) focus on five university students and six professionals to examine closely how individual writers’ agency, audience, and identity are interrelated in their text construction in two or three languages and diverse genres, including academic and creative writing. The combined studies provide new insights into multilingual writing development by revealing the close interrelationship among these three principal aspects of writing across languages. They also demonstrate the writers’ multi-directional use of dynamic transfer (reuse and reshaping) for L1, L2, and L3 text construction, and the use of mixed languages L1/L2 or L1/L3 (translanguaging) for composing processes, in addition to the creative power of multilingual writers.
One significant contribution of this book is to provide models of innovative ways to analyze text and new directions for writing research that go beyond complexity, accuracy, and fluency. Categories and detailed examples of text features used for writer voice construction (e.g., specific characteristics of Personal, Emergent, and Mature Voice) are helpful for writing teachers and for developing writers to improve ways of conveying their own intended writer identity to the reader. The studies break new ground by extending our analysis of L2 writing to the same writers’ L1 and L3 writing and multiple genres.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9783031120473
ISBN-10: 3031120477
Pagini: 360
Ilustrații: XV, 360 p. 1 illus.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Ediția:1st ed. 2023
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Springer
Seria Multilingual Education
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland
ISBN-10: 3031120477
Pagini: 360
Ilustrații: XV, 360 p. 1 illus.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Ediția:1st ed. 2023
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Springer
Seria Multilingual Education
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland
Cuprins
Chapter 1. Introduction.- Part I : Development of Multilingual Writing.- Chapter 2. Evolving Writer Agency: Discourse Types.- Chapter 3. Connecting with the Audience: Metadiscourse.- Chapter 4. Constructing Writer Identity: Self-Representation.- Chapter 5. Developing Writer Identity: Voice Construction.- Part II: Interconnectedness of Agency, Audience, Identity Chapter 6. Natsu’s Challenges: Text Construction and Identities.- Chapter 7. L1/L2/L3 Writers’ Advantages: Text and Process.- Chapter 8. Multilingual Scholars: Audience and Expertise.- Chapter 9. Multilingual Artist and Poet: Unbounded Self-Expression.- Part III: Synthesis and Implications.- Chapter 10. Integration, Theoretical Perspectives, Pedagogical Applications.
Recenzii
“Each part of the book builds on the previous section, helping the reader gain a deeper understanding of the prior discussion … . This volume gives teachers new means to assess the strengths and weaknesses of their students and do further research in this field by looking at their students’ writing using the same methods … . I plan to use it to inform my teaching and firmly believe it serves a valuable purpose for anyone involved in multilingual writing.” (Julia Christmas, JALT Journal, Vol. 46 (1), May, 2024)
Notă biografică
Hiroe Kobayashi (Ed.D., Teachers College, Columbia University), Professor Emeritus, Hiroshima University, taught advanced English writing and pragmatics in Japan, and ESL in New York and the Philippines. She has published numerous articles in international journals including Language Learning, Journal of Second Language Writing, and Modern Language Journal, co-authored with Carol Rinnert, two of which won awards for best JSLW article of the year.Carol Rinnert (Ph.D., SUNY/Buffalo), Professor Emeritus, Hiroshima City University, taught EFL/ESL, English writing, and linguistics in the US, Yemen (as senior Fulbright lecturer), and Japan. She has published numerous book chapters and articles, co-authored with Hiroe Kobayashi, in international journals including Language Learning, Journal of Second Language Writing, Modern Language Journal, and Journal of Pragmatics.
Textul de pe ultima copertă
With millions of people becoming multilingual writers in the globalized digital world, this book helps to empower writers to connect with their readers and project their identities effectively across languages, social contexts, and genres. In a series of closely-related studies that build on each other, we look comprehensively at how writers develop their ability to construct meaning for different audiences in multiple languages. This book, which draws on various approaches (including a social view of writing, multicompetence, adaptive transfer, complex systems theory, motivation, and translanguaging), contributes to on-going efforts to integrate differing approaches to multilingual writing research. This book focusses on how writer agency (control over text construction), audience awareness (ability to meet expectations of prospective readers), and writer identity (projection of image of the writer in the text) progress as multilingual writers gain more experience across languages.
The within-writer, cross-sectional text analysis (Chapters 2-5) examines 185 essays written in Japanese and English by eight groups of writers from novice to advanced (N=103), supplemented by insights from these writers’ reflections. We explore how they employ three kinds of text features (discourse types, metadiscourse, and self-representation), which relate to their developing agency, audience, and writer identity in their text construction, and propose a new model for writer voice construction based on those features. The four case studies (Chapters 6-9) focus on five university students and six professionals to examine closely how individual writers’ agency, audience, and identity are interrelated in their text construction in two or three languages and diverse genres, including academic and creative writing. The combined studies provide new insights into multilingual writing development by revealing the close interrelationship among these three principal aspects of writing across languages. They also demonstrate the writers’ multi-directional use of dynamic transfer (reuse and reshaping) for L1, L2, and L3 text construction, and the use of mixed languages L1/L2 or L1/L3 (translanguaging) for composing processes, in addition to the creative power of multilingual writers.
One significant contribution of this book is to provide models of innovative ways to analyze text and new directions for writing research that go beyond complexity, accuracy, and fluency. Categories and detailed examples of text features used for writer voice construction (e.g., specific characteristics of Personal, Emergent, and Mature Voice) are helpful for writing teachers and for developing writers to improve ways of conveying their own intended writer identity to the reader. The studies break new ground by extending our analysis of L2 writingto the same writers’ L1 and L3 writing and multiple genres.
The within-writer, cross-sectional text analysis (Chapters 2-5) examines 185 essays written in Japanese and English by eight groups of writers from novice to advanced (N=103), supplemented by insights from these writers’ reflections. We explore how they employ three kinds of text features (discourse types, metadiscourse, and self-representation), which relate to their developing agency, audience, and writer identity in their text construction, and propose a new model for writer voice construction based on those features. The four case studies (Chapters 6-9) focus on five university students and six professionals to examine closely how individual writers’ agency, audience, and identity are interrelated in their text construction in two or three languages and diverse genres, including academic and creative writing. The combined studies provide new insights into multilingual writing development by revealing the close interrelationship among these three principal aspects of writing across languages. They also demonstrate the writers’ multi-directional use of dynamic transfer (reuse and reshaping) for L1, L2, and L3 text construction, and the use of mixed languages L1/L2 or L1/L3 (translanguaging) for composing processes, in addition to the creative power of multilingual writers.
One significant contribution of this book is to provide models of innovative ways to analyze text and new directions for writing research that go beyond complexity, accuracy, and fluency. Categories and detailed examples of text features used for writer voice construction (e.g., specific characteristics of Personal, Emergent, and Mature Voice) are helpful for writing teachers and for developing writers to improve ways of conveying their own intended writer identity to the reader. The studies break new ground by extending our analysis of L2 writingto the same writers’ L1 and L3 writing and multiple genres.
Caracteristici
Offers unique perspectives on multilingual writers’ development Introduces an original model of writer voice construction Includes four case-studies