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Language across Difference
Ethnicity, Communication, and Youth Identities in Changing Urban Schools

A window into ethnic and linguistic difference among Latino/a, African American and Pacific Islander youth in contemporary US schools.

Django Paris (Author)

9781107613966, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 11 July 2013

228 pages, 6 b/w illus. 7 tables
21.6 x 14 x 1.2 cm, 0.27 kg

'Paris is transparent about the ways that he is culturally similar and dissimilar to the various students that he is learning with. His courageousness through ethnography and reflection brings a level of authenticity to his research that further privileges the voices of the students and the communities that he seeks to better understand.' Anne Harper Charity Dudley, Teachers College Record

Once a predominantly African-American city, South Vista opened the twenty-first century with a large Latino/a majority and a significant population of Pacific Islanders. Using an innovative blend of critical ethnography and social language methodologies, Paris offers the voices and experiences of South Vista youth as a window into how today's young people challenge and reinforce ethnic and linguistic difference in demographically changing urban schools and communities. The ways African-American language, Spanish and Samoan are used within and across ethnicity in social and academic interactions, text messages and youth-authored rap lyrics show urban young people enacting both new and old visions of pluralist cultural spaces. Paris illustrates how understanding youth communication, ethnicity and identities in changing urban landscapes like South Vista offers crucial avenues for researchers and educators to push for more equitable schools and a more equitable society.

1. Beginnings: shouts of affirmation from 'our culture'
2. 'Spanish is becoming famous': youth perspectives on Spanish in a changing youth community
3. 'True Samoan': ethnic solidarity and linguistic reality
4. 'They're in my culture, they speak the same way': sharing African American language at South Vista
5. 'You rep what you're from': texting identities in multiethnic youth space
6. Making school go: revisioning school for pluralism.

Subject Areas: Multicultural education [JNFR], Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography [JHMC], Bilingualism & multilingualism [CFDM], Sociolinguistics [CFB]

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