Master data

Title: Textbooks Re-Visited: Theoretical and Methodological Implications of Top-Down vs. Bottom-Up Identifications of Gender(ed) Discourses in EFL Textbooks
Description:

From a social constructionist perspective, gender and sexuality are constructed, (re-)produced, performed and emergent in discursive practices (Sunderland and Litosseliti 2008). The omnipresence and relevance of these social constructs also affects educational institutions, which tend to play a decisive role in the socialisation process and in the naturalisation of gender and sexual norms via a hidden curriculum (Eckert 2014; Navarro Hernández et al. 2013). While the foreign language classroom provides unique opportunities for adolescents to construct their identities, discourses drawn on are often based on gender binaries and heteronormativity. Since textbooks are the basic means of instruction, gendered discourses (re-)produced in them receive an authoritative status. The verbal, visual and multimodal representations of gender and sexuality influence both teachers and students in their discursive practices and interactions (Pakuła, Pawelczyk and Sunderland 2015; Curdt-Christiansen and Weninger 2015; Motschenbacher 2016). Though considered an important epistemological research site (Sunderland 2004), the need for critical linguistic textbook research is not reflected in the research agenda. In-depth linguistic and discourse analyses of textbooks are sparse, an applicable methodology – drawing on constructivist theories of gender and sexual identity – is missing. Thus, the current research project set out to combine micro- and macro-analyses, differentiating between descriptive and interpretative stages in a bottom-up, multi-perspectival research design. This talk discusses the theoretical and methodological challenges, the advantages and disadvantages of bottom-up and top-down approaches in such a design. It addresses the definition and identification of discourse(s), the relations between linguistic traces and larger constituents and the criticism regarding researcher subjectivity, a lack of transparency, systematicity or replicability (Taylor 2001; Weninger and Kiss 2015). By reflecting on larger research paradigms, the Post-structuralist framework and the operationalisation of discourse in bottom-up approaches, it aims to contribute to an ongoing discussion about the incompatibility or possible reconciliation of bottom-up vs. top-down perspectives.

Keywords: textbooks; gender and sexuality; social constructioninsm; critical discursive psychology; methodology;
Type: Registered lecture
Homepage: https://oelt2019.wixsite.com/oelt2019/
Event: 45. Österreichische Linguistiktagung (Salzburg)
Date: 07.12.2019
lecture status:

Assignment

Organisation Address
Universität Klagenfurt
 
SchreibCenter (SC)
Universitätsstraße 65-67
9020 Klagenfurt am Wörthersee
Austria
   schreibcenter@aau.at
https://www.aau.at/schreibcenter
To organisation
Universitätsstraße 65-67
AT - 9020  Klagenfurt am Wörthersee
Fakultät für Kultur- und Bildungswissenschaften
 
Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik
Universitätstraße 65 - 67
9020 Klagenfurt
Austria
   anglistik@aau.at
https://www.aau.at/en/english/
To organisation
Universitätstraße 65 - 67
AT - 9020  Klagenfurt

Categorisation

Subject areas
  • 602007 - Applied linguistics
Research Cluster
  • Educational research
Focus of lecture
  • Science to Science (Quality indicator: n.a.)
Classification raster of the assigned organisational units:
Group of participants
  • Mainly national
Published?
  • No
working groups No working group selected

Cooperations

No partner organisations selected