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- Title
Narrative and Identity in the “Language Learning Project”.
- Authors
COFFEY, SIMON; STREET, BRIAN
- Abstract
This article reports on a study that analysed life history accounts of language learning. The key aim of the study was to understand how the experience of language learning was discursively constructed through recourse to particular cultural worlds and narrative strategies. The study contributes to the growing field of research using language learning histories to extend our understanding of the learner as a social actor who derives and acts upon different identity positions that are institutionally and culturally situated but that are also dynamic and individually interpreted. Using the ethnographic concept of “figured worlds” ( Holland, Lachiotte, Jr., Skinner, & Cain, 1998 ), we report here how participants—British adults who have learned a foreign language to a high level of proficiency—structure the “language learning project” through discursive representations of social structures meshed with personalised narratives of individual experience. By combining theoretical and methodological frames for narrative inquiry with an ethnographic perspective, we were able to identify a number of discursive worlds, both material and symbolic, that are figured into the autobiographical accounts. In the concluding discussion, we offer some possible directions for extending this type of investigation and also suggest some practical ways in which our analysis might enrich the teaching and learning of foreign languages.
- Subjects
FOREIGN language education; LANGUAGE acquisition; LANGUAGE &; culture; NARRATION; IDENTITY (Philosophical concept); AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL memory
- Publication
Modern Language Journal, 2008, Vol 92, Issue 3, p452
- ISSN
0026-7902
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1540-4781.2008.00757.x