This book investigates the changing relationship between language and citizenship in contemporary Japan. The essays collected here discuss the manner in which linguistic diversity calls into question the traditional view of a Japanese citizen as a first-language speaker of Japanese, and what the relationship between language and citizenship mi
This book investigates the changing relationship between language and citizenship in contemporary Japan. The essays collected here discuss the manner in which linguistic diversity calls into question the traditional view of a Japanese citizen as a first-language speaker of Japanese, and what the relationship between language and citizenship mi
Nanette Gottlieb is Professor of Japanese Studies in the School of Languages and Comparative Cultural Studies at the University of Queensland.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Language, citizenship, and identity in Japan Nanette Gottlieb 2. After homogeneity: maintaining unity in a linguistically diversifying Japan Patrick Heinrich 3. 'It's better if they speak broken Japanese': Language as a pathway or an obstacle to citizenship in Japan? Chris Burgess 4. Languages and citizenship in education: Migrant languages in government schools Kaori H. Okano 5. Children Crossing Borders and their citizenship in Japan Ikuo Kawakami 6. Remedial language education and citizenship: Examining the JSL classroom as an ethnic project Robert Moorehead 7. Gender capital and the educated citizen: Japanese mothers speaking of language acquisition and education for foreign children Genaro Castro-Vázquez 8. Cultural citizenship and the hierarchy of foreign languages: Japanese Brazilians' views on the status of English and Portuguese in Japan Ernani Oda 9. Language rights of non-Japanese defendants in Japanese criminal courts Ikuko Nakane 10. English is my home: Citizenship, language, and identity in the Ogasawara Islands David Chapman and Daniel Long 11. Multilingual or Easy Japanese? Promoting citizenship via local government websites Tessa Carroll
1. Language, citizenship, and identity in Japan Nanette Gottlieb 2. After homogeneity: maintaining unity in a linguistically diversifying Japan Patrick Heinrich 3. 'It's better if they speak broken Japanese': Language as a pathway or an obstacle to citizenship in Japan? Chris Burgess 4. Languages and citizenship in education: Migrant languages in government schools Kaori H. Okano 5. Children Crossing Borders and their citizenship in Japan Ikuo Kawakami 6. Remedial language education and citizenship: Examining the JSL classroom as an ethnic project Robert Moorehead 7. Gender capital and the educated citizen: Japanese mothers speaking of language acquisition and education for foreign children Genaro Castro-Vázquez 8. Cultural citizenship and the hierarchy of foreign languages: Japanese Brazilians' views on the status of English and Portuguese in Japan Ernani Oda 9. Language rights of non-Japanese defendants in Japanese criminal courts Ikuko Nakane 10. English is my home: Citizenship, language, and identity in the Ogasawara Islands David Chapman and Daniel Long 11. Multilingual or Easy Japanese? Promoting citizenship via local government websites Tessa Carroll
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