Style, Identity and Literacy: English in Singapore is a qualitative study of the literacy practices of a group of Singaporean adolescents, relating their patterns of interaction – both inside and outside the classroom – to the different levels of social organization in Singaporean society (home, peer group and school). Combining field data gathered through a series of detailed interviews with available classroom observations, the study focuses on six adolescents from different ethnic and social backgrounds as they negotiate the learning of English against the backdrop of multilingual Singapore. This book provides social explanations for the difficulties and challenges these adolescents face by drawing on current developments in sociolinguistics, literacy studies, English language teaching and language policy.
Spis treści
Chapter 1: Social Practices and Linguistic Markets
Chapter 2: Multilingualism in Late-Modern Singapore: A Portrait
Chapter 3: Multilingualism in Late Modernity: Literacy as a Reflexive Performance of Identity
Chapter 4: Some Data about our Data
Chapter 5: Fandi and Ping: Literacy Practices and the Performance of Identities on Ambivalent Markets
Chapter 6: Edwin, Wen and Yan: Styling Literacy Practices Inside and Outside the Classroom
Chapter 7: Sha: A Comparison
Chapter 8: Pedagogy, Literacy And Identity
Chapter 9: The Dynamics of Language Distribution in Late-Modern Multilingual Singapore