This book explores young children’s language acquisition in multilingual households through an original longitudinal study of the author’s own children and interviews with members of other Korean-English families. The study investigates how multilingual children not only acquire multiple languages (verbal communication) but also acquire multiple strategies of non-verbal communication. In the process, it is also revealed that parents learn from children, collaboratively shaping the language of their family together in a manner that is between and beyond languages and cultures. The book explores the different types and frequency of non-verbal behaviours acquired by multilingual children and reveals how multilingual families use a range of multimodal resources to communicate effectively in a way that creates solidarity. The results of this longitudinal study are discussed within the paradigm of translanguaging and provide insight into an underrepresented multilingual population. With accompanying online videos, this book offers rich multimodal family interaction data for students and researchers interested in multilingualism, family language practices, and first and second language acquisition.
Innehållsförteckning
Figures
Acknowledgements
Notes on Romanisation
Notes on Videos
Preface
Chapter 1. Everyday Talk: Beyond Languages and Cultures
Chapter 2. Linguistic Tapestry of a Multilingual Family
Chapter 3. Learning Together: A Case Study
Chapter 4. Attitudes and Emotions
Chapter 5. Politeness Matters
Chapter 6. Talking with Parents
Chapter 7. Talking with Grandparents, Wider Family, and Carers
Chapter 8. Sibling and Peer Talk
Epilogue: Towards a Culture of Translanguaging
References
Index
Om författaren
Jieun Kiaer is Professor of Korean Linguistics at the University of Oxford, UK. Her recent publications include Young Children’s Foreign Language Anxiety: The Case of South Korea (with Jessica M. Morgan-Brown and Naya Choi, Multilingual Matters, 2021) and Multimodal Communication in Young Multilingual Children: Learning Beyond Words (Multilingual Matters, 2023).