Bassey E. Antia is Professor of Applied Linguistics at the University of Western Cape, South Africa. His research interests span across multilingualism, terminology, language and health, the politics of language, and Southern epistemologies. A co-edited volume, Decolonial Voices, Language, and Race, appeared in 2022 (Multilingual Matters). Previous work has included a monograph and two co-edited volumes.
Sinfree Makoni is Professor of African Studies and Applied Linguistics at Pennsylvania State University. He has held a number of different positions in the United States and Southern Africa. He has published extensively in the areas of language in health, language policy and planning, and decolonial and Southern epistemologies. He is currently an associate editor of the Journal of Applied Linguistics and holds a number of honorary appointments in universities in Africa.
List of Contributors
Acknowledgements
Foreword
Lynn Mario T. Menezes de Souza
Introduction
Bassey E. Antia and Sinfree Makoni
Part I: The politics of the constitution of language, and its metalanguage, in the Global South
Chapter 1: Can there be a politics of language? Reflections on language and metalanguage
Christopher Hutton
Chapter 2: Shallow grammar and African American English: Evaluating the master's tools in linguistics
Arthur K. Spears
Chapter 3: Multilingual socialization and development of multilingualism as a first language: Implications for multilingual education
Ajit K. Mohanty
Chapter 4: Questioning epistemic racism in issues of language studies in Brazil: The case of Pretuguês versus popular Brazilian Portuguese
Lynn Mario T. Menezes de Souza and Gabriel Nascimento
Chapter 5: Baptism of indigenous languages into an ideology: A decolonial critique of missionary linguistics in South-Eastern Nigeria
Unyierie Idem and Imelda Udoh
Chapter 6: Christian-lects and Islam-lects: On religious inventions of languages
Cristine Severo and Ashraf Abdelhay
Part II: Who gets published in sociolinguistics?
Chapter 7: Black female scholarship matters: Erasure of black African women's sociolinguistic scholarship
Busi Makoni
Chapter 8: African contributions to four journals of sociolinguistics
Evershed Kwasi Amuzu, Elvis ResCue, Bernard Boakye and Nana Aba Appiah Amfo
Part III: Language in the Global South and the social inscription of difference
Chapter 9: Begging for "authenticity": Language, class and race politics in South Africa
Bongi Bangeni, Nwabisa Bangeni and Stephanie Rudwick
Chapter 10: Mandarin Chinese as the national language and its discontents
Uradyn E. Bulag
Chapter 11: Minoritized youth language in Norwegian media discourse: Surfacing the abyssal line
Rafael Lomeu Gomes and Bente A. Svendsen
Part IV: Learning and the quotidian experience of language in the Global South
Chapter 12: The lexico-semantics of Whiteness and its transactionalization in Black African languages
Bassey E. Antia, Sinfree Makoni and Joseph Igono
Chapter 13: Linguistic governmentality, neoliberalism, and Communicative Language Teaching: Invisibility of indigenous ethnic languages in the multilingual schools in Bangladesh
Shaila Sultana, Nuzhat Tazin Ahmed, Md. Nahid Ferdous Bhuiyan and Md. Shamsul Huda
Chapter 14: Making of an exile: An analytic authoethnography
Mari Haneda
Part V: Summing up
Epistolary afterword: Letter to the prince
Bassey E. Antia
Epilogue: Every dog has its day; but the long-time underdog can't wait any longer for that day!
Kanavillil Rajagopalan
This innovative collection offers a pan-Southern rejoinder to hegemonies of Northern Sociolinguistics. It showcases voices from the Global South that substitute alternative and complementary narrations of the link between language and society for canonical renditions of the field.