[Linganth] Second call for special issue: Heritage Language, Racialization, and 'Post'Colonialism (abstracts by Nov 22)

Delfino, Jennifer jdelfino at illinois.edu
Mon Nov 11 14:21:56 UTC 2024


Dear all,

I'm writing again to invite abstract submissions for a special issue of Language, Society, & Culture, edited by Chantal Tetreault, Sonia Das, and myself. Please email me up to 300 words of a proposed article and include your name and affiliation by Nov 22nd. Authors must commit to a firm Aug 2025 deadline for submission and Dec 2025 for final revisions. Please feel free to circulate to other listservs as well!

Call for Papers: Heritage Language, Racialization, and (Post)colonialism
A Special Issue of Language, Culture, & Society
Special Issue Co-Editors: Jennifer B. Delfino, Chantal Tetreault, and Sonia N. Das

PLEASE SUBMIT BY NOV 22, 2024 TO: jdelfino at illinois.edu<mailto:jdelfino at illinois.edu>

What is heritage language, and how do framings and contestations around the notions of “heritage” inform, reproduce, and confound ways of organizing difference and belonging in what are claimed to be ‘post’colonial contexts? What institutions, practices, and actors have a stake in defining heritage and the value of particular languages and dialects for demarcating contemporary ways of organizing around difference and similarity, and in relation to which social, political, cultural, and economic projects? As co-editors of this special issue of Language, Culture, & Society, we propose to examine how notions of heritage, language, and race become bundled together in educational and other settings in ways that can reproduce colonial hierarchies even when projects attempt to legitimate themselves as multicultural and/or as post-, de-, or anti-colonial. Each of the special issue editors’ current projects examines these questions and issues in different ways, and we seek additional papers to enhance our respective foci. In line with the journal’s focus on how language intersects with power and the making of social difference and inequality in relation to history, colonialism, and capitalism, this special issue seeks additional papers that problematize the production of “heritage language” as a means for the reproduction or contestation of racializing ideologies and processes in relation to postcolonial nation-building and other political, economic, and social projects. We seek papers that will offer diverse epistemological standpoints and theoretical and methodological approaches on the question of heritage language, racialization and postcolonialism, including but not limited to areas such as: applied linguistics, linguistic ethnography, linguistic anthropology, postcolonial semiotics, critical discourse analysis, interactional sociolinguistics, language policy and planning, and classroom discourse analysis. While we welcome multimodal methods, a focus on the robust analysis of language and/or discourse in relation to social and cultural processes will unite these papers with respect to the chosen theme of the special issue.

Please send a proposed abstract to jdelfino at illinois.edu<mailto:jdelfino at illinois.edu> that includes a title, your name and affiliation, and no more than 300 words describing the project on or by November 22, 2024. Authors must be able to commit to a firm mid-August 2025 deadline for submitting their full papers and having them revised for final submission by mid-December 2025.


All best,

Jennifer

Jennifer B. Delfino, Ph.D. (she/her)
Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
607 S Mathews Ave., Room 109
Urbana, IL 61802
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