It has been said there are more Chinese learning English than there are Americans. We all have a sense that the first decades of the third millennium, including the effects of the global financial recession, signal dramatic changes to the shape of the world to come. China’s emergence as a superpower is one of the few certainties in this rapidly changing world. What is less well realised is the critical role which China’s decisions about English will play in the world’s communication profile. This unique volume explores this question looking at the debates on identity, cultural values and communication practices. Taking a wide-ranging view and uniquely blending both Chinese and Western perspectives the volume explores the critically important cultural consequences of mass English learning in today’s world.
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PART I Western Dreams, Chinese Quests: Habitus and Encounter
1. Intercultural Encounters and Deep Cultural Beliefs – Joseph Lo Bianco
2. Sociocultural Contexts and English in China: Retaining and Reforming the Cultural Habitus – Gao Yihong
3. English and the Chinese Quest – Jane Orton
PART II Learners, Identities, Purposes
4. Language and Identity: State of the Art and a Debate of Legitimacy – Gao Yihong
5. Beautiful English vs. the Multilingual Self – Li Zhanzi
6. “Just a Tool”: The Role of English in the Curriculum – Jane Orton
7. The More I Learned, the Less I Found My Self – Bian Yongwei
PART III Landscapes and Mindscapes
8. Language, Ethnicity and Identity in China – Zhou Qingsheng
9. Ethnic Minorities, Bilingual Education and Glocalization – Xu Hongchen
10. English at Home in China: How Far Does the Bond Extend? – Joseph Lo Bianco
11. Motivational Force-Imagined Community in Crazy English – Li Jingyan
12. Understanding Ourselves Through ‘Teacher Man’ – Li Zhanzi
PART IV Narratives
13. Negotiated (Non-)Participation of ‘Unsuccessful’ Learners – Li Yuxia
14. Teachers’ Identities in Personal Narratives – Liu Yi
PART V English for China in the World
15. East Goes West – Jane Orton
16. Being Chinese, Speaking English – Joseph Lo Bianco
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Joseph Lo Bianco is Professor Emeritus of language and literacy education, University of Melbourne, Australia and Vice President of the Australian Academy of the Humanities. He has published widely on language policy and planning across a wide range of geographical and language contexts.