Lexington Books
Pages: 198
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-4985-7633-8 • Hardback • October 2019 • $105.00 • (£81.00)
978-1-4985-7634-5 • eBook • October 2019 • $99.50 • (£77.00)
Anna Odrowąż-Coates is associate professor at the Maria Grzegorzewska University in Warsaw and chairholder of the UNESCO/Janusz Korczak Chair in Social Pedagogy.
Chapter One: Language Positioning in Poland and in Portugal
Chapter Two: Under the Umbrella of Institutional Ethnography
Chapter Three: Language and Discourse
Chapter Four: Linguistic Power Struggles
Chapter Five: Language Hierarchy—Social Hierarchy
Chapter Six: Social Positioning and Class Diversification
Chapter Seven: Linguistic Turn?
Chapter Eight: Social Struggle and the Empirical Data
Chapter Nine: Language, Gender Aspects, and Social Positioning
Conclusion: Summary of the Research Outcomes
Anna Odrowaz-Coates dives deeply into English language acquisition in Portugal and Poland. With unique empirical data—from questionnaires to qualitative interviews and auto-ethnographic observations—the author reaches different scales and perspectives on the issue. She refuses dualistic or simplistic answers, acknowledging both the empowering and the disempowering aspects of English language acquisition. Moving from Fairclough to Foucault, Althusser, and Bourdieu, all of them enriched by postcolonial framings and feminist approaches, Anna Odrowaz-Coates contributes to the socio-educational inequality perspective, relating language to issues of power and soft power.
— Viviane Resende, University of Brasília
This timely book tackles the dominance of English in current European language policy with a critical and reflexive socio-linguistic perspective, revealing invaluable insights. Anna Odrowąż-Coates, an ambitious and incredibly intuitive applied linguist in Poland, approaches the topic with a foresight that makes the book an imperative read for researchers and all stakeholders involved in language policy reforms worldwide.
— Jim McKinley, University College London