Me Tarzan, You Jane
Details
How is desire expressed in films with English as a second language (ESL)? How do ESL students and teachers identify with cinematic ESL characters? Do popular films uphold or redefine racial and gender ESL stereotypes? Drawing on a wide range of examples from well-known reel ESL teachers such as Miss Anna in The King and I to real classroom experience, the book provides a comprehensive review of literature on popular films in education, a much needed analysis of popular films with ESL, and an exploration of how teachers and students take up popular identities of ESL. Mackie contextualizes her findings within recent thinking in feminist pedagogy and postcolonial, cultural, and feminist studies. She argues that cinematic ESL subjects are sites of various raced and gendered desires, and that real readers of films by-pass their race, gender, age, and occupation to access the cinematic body as politically engaged and disrupting the status quo. This important book will be welcomed by students and researchers in education, sociolinguistics, and cultural and gender studies.
Autorentext
Awarded the Joseph Katz Memorial Scholarship for substantial work in anti-oppressive education,Ardiss Mackie has published in Canadian Women's Studies,TESOL Quarterly,Canadian Journal of Education,English Quarterly,Contemporary Verse 2,and Pedagogy, Culture, and Society. She is the co-author of Suspicious Minds and Traditional Ties.
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09783838325057
- Sprache Englisch
- Größe H220mm x B150mm x T22mm
- Jahr 2010
- EAN 9783838325057
- Format Kartonierter Einband (Kt)
- ISBN 978-3-8383-2505-7
- Titel Me Tarzan, You Jane
- Autor Ardiss Mackie
- Untertitel Desire and Identity in Popular Films with ESL
- Gewicht 570g
- Herausgeber LAP Lambert Acad. Publ.
- Anzahl Seiten 372
- Genre Sozialwissenschaften allgemein