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Translanguaging identities and ideologies: creating transnational space through flexible multilingual practices amongst Chinese university students in the UK
In: Applied linguistics. - Oxford : Oxford Univ. Press 34 (2013) 5, 516-535
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2
Translanguaging Identities and Ideologies: Creating Transnational Space Through Flexible Multilingual Practices Amongst Chinese University Students in the UK
In: Applied Linguistics 34 (2013) 5, 516-535
IDS Bibliografie zur Gesprächsforschung
3
Children's acquisition of phonology
Zhu, Hua; Dodd, B.J.; Holm, A.. - : Whurr Publishers, 2013
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4
Translanguaging identities: creating transnational space through flexible multilingual practices amongst Chinese university students in the UK
Li, Wei; Zhu, Hua. - : Oxford Journals, 2013
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5
Diaspora: multilingual and intercultural communication across time and space
Li, Wei; Zhu, Hua. - : John Benjamins, 2013
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6
Exploring intercultural communicaiton: language in action
Zhu, Hua. - : Routledge, 2013
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7
Intercultural communication
Zhu, Hua. - : Wiley Blackwell, 2013
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8
First language acquisition
Zhu, Hua. - : Wiley Blackwell, 2013
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9
Translanguaging Identities and Ideologies: Creating Transnational Space Through Flexible Multilingual Practices Amongst Chinese University Students in the UK
Li, Wei; Zhu, Hua. - : Oxford University Press, 2013
Abstract: There are thousands of ethnic Chinese students from different backgrounds in British universities today, a fact that has not been fully appreciated or studied from an applied linguistics perspective. For example, there are third- or fourth-generation British-born Chinese; there are students from China, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Singapore who have received whole or part of their primary and secondary education in Britain; and there are Chinese students who completed their schooling in their home countries. To add to the diversity of the Chinese student population, several distinctive varieties of Chinese are spoken as well as different varieties of English and other languages. In terms of their choice of language and social networks, the Chinese students have several options, including, for example, staying with their own language variety group (e.g. Cantonese, Mandarin); staying with their own region-of-origin group (e.g. British-born, Mainland Chinese, Taiwanese, Hong Kong); and creating new transnational and multilingual groupings. This article focuses on a group of Chinese university students who have chosen to create transnational and multilingual networks. Through analysis of narrative data and ethnographic observations, we explore issues such as their socio-cultural identification processes, the interactions between their linguistic and political ideologies; their multilingual practices and what they have learned from being part of this new social space.
Keyword: Articles
URL: http://applij.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/34/5/516
https://doi.org/10.1093/applin/amt022
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