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  1. "Veränderungen von Leuten, die etwas verändern wollen": über symbolische Gewalt und Bildungsprozesse in Emine Sevgi Özdamars Roman "Die Brücke vom Goldenen Horn"
    Published: 2012
    Publisher:  DEU

    'Ausgehend von einem Bildungsbegriff, der Bildung als Transformation grundlegender Figuren des Welt- und Selbstverhältnisses in Auseinandersetzung mit neuartigen Herausforderungen versteht, wird danach gefragt, wie solche Bildungsprozesse trotz der... more

     

    'Ausgehend von einem Bildungsbegriff, der Bildung als Transformation grundlegender Figuren des Welt- und Selbstverhältnisses in Auseinandersetzung mit neuartigen Herausforderungen versteht, wird danach gefragt, wie solche Bildungsprozesse trotz der relativen Stabilität gesellschaftlicher Machtstrukturen und trotz der subtilen Wirkungsweisen symbolischer Gewalt im Sinne Bourdieus möglich sind. Özdamars Roman wird dabei einerseits interpretiert als eindringliche Darstellung der Mechanismen symbolischer Gewalt am Arbeitsplatz, in der politischen Öffentlichkeit und in der Familie, und andererseits als gelungene Inszenierung einer subversiven Infragestellung dieser Gewalt, die ihren Rückhalt findet in kommunikativen Orten einer Art Gegenöffentlichkeit und im verfremdenden Gebrauch vorherrschender Sprachmuster.' (Autorenreferat) ; 'Conceiving of individual development as of change occurring in the patterns of a subject's relations to the world and to his or herself and brought about by coping with novel challenges, the paper addresses the issue of how - in spite of the relative stability of power structures and notwithstanding the subtle modes of action of symbolic violence as described by Bourdieu - such processes of individual development are at all possible. Özdamar's novel is interpreted, on the one hand, as a vivid description of the mechanisms of symbolic violence operating at the workplace, in the political public and in the family and, on the other hand, as a successful enactment of subversive forms of challenging this violence, which find their support in the communicational sites of a kind of counter public and in the defamiliarizing use of hegemonic speech patterns.' (author's abstract)|

     

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  2. The Ideological Stance of Multilingualism in Education in Malaysia in the Press 2000-2020
    Published: 2022
    Publisher:  AUT

    The past 20 years have witnessed major shifts in language and education policy in Malaysia. This reflects a range of social, economic, and political forces that influence and shape the policymaking in this multi-ethnic and multicultural country. Past... more

     

    The past 20 years have witnessed major shifts in language and education policy in Malaysia. This reflects a range of social, economic, and political forces that influence and shape the policymaking in this multi-ethnic and multicultural country. Past research has suggested that language and education policies in Malaysia tend to have two main stances and are generally related to Malay (the national language), English, Mandarin, and Tamil. One stance is related to issues of globalization and employability, and the other is related to national and ethnic identities. In view of these stances, this paper seeks to contribute to the discussion and debates on these issues by empirically investigating inherent ideological positions in official statements published in two newspapers in the past 20 years. Specifically, it adopts concepts from critical discourse studies, and uses methods from computational linguistics to examine official statements from a total of 30,508 Malaysian newspaper articles published between 2000 and 2020. The findings indicate that the role of Malay and national ideology, and the global positioning of English continue to be central concerns in the discussion of language and education in Malaysia. In addition, the importance of learning Mandarin is also emphasized. However, indigenous and minority languages are largely absent in the discourses on education policies in the country. The effects of this exclusion are already apparent in the shift to languages like Malay, Mandarin, and English as a first language, and the increasing number of languages considered to be under threat in Malaysia.

     

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    Source: BASE Selection for Comparative Literature
    Language: Undetermined
    Media type: Article (journal)
    Format: Online
    Parent title: ASEAS - Austrian Journal of South-East Asian Studies ; 14 ; 2 ; 173-193 ; Multicultural Lingual and Multicultural Education
    DDC Categories: 800; 370
    Subjects: Literatur; Rhetorik; Literaturwissenschaft; Bildung und Erziehung; Literature; rhetoric and criticism; Education; Sprachwissenschaft; Linguistik; Makroebene des Bildungswesens; Science of Literature; Linguistics; Macroanalysis of the Education System; Economics of Education; Educational Policy; Malaysia; Bildungspolitik; Sprachenpolitik; Mehrsprachigkeit; Sprache; Minderheit; indigene Völker; Südostasien; language policy; multilingualism; language; minority; indigenous peoples; Southeast Asia
    Rights:

    Creative Commons - Namensnennung, Nicht kommerz., Keine Bearbeitung 3.0 ; Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0