Ruanni Tupas is Associate Professor of Sociolinguistics in Education at the Institute of Education, University College London, UK. He has published extensively on TESOL, bi/multilingual education and World Englishes.
Preface
(Re)framing Unequal Englishes: unequal personhood, deficit ideology and epistemic injustice
PREM PHYAK
PART 1: Experiencing unequal Englishes in everyday life
1 Memory work of a World Englishes (WE) advocate experiencing Unequal Englishes
ROBY MARLINA
2 'Deficient' English and social inequality: ethnographic findings from two rural Bangladeshi madrasas
QUMRUL HASAN CHOWDHURY
3 Unequal Englishes and stancetaking in Michelle Chong's parodic performances of Filipino domestic workers in Singapore
CHRISTIAN GO
PART 2: Constructing unequal Englishes in school
4 Constructing Unequal English-speakerhood in Chile: a narrative analysis perspective
MANUEL VÁSQUEZ, ANDRÉS GUTIÉRREZ, ROMMY ANABALÓN SCHAAF AND MARCO ESPINOZA
5 Unequal Englishes, native English speaker teachers, and social variables: an intersectional approach
JUNSHUAN LIU AND SONGQING LI
6 Students' critical voices and (re)positioning toward "standard Englishes"
RIBUT WAHYUDI
PART 3: Unpacking unequal Englishes as ideology
7 'Half-native' and cheap English teachers: Probing unequal Englishes through multimodal critical discourse analysis
JULIUS C. MARTINEZ
8 Unequal Englishes in multimodal texts: visibilizing opaque power relations through critical discourse analysis
JAYSON PARBA AND TOMOAKI MORIKAWA
9 Unequal Englishes through Chinglish: conflicting language ideologies in the official discourse
GUOWEN SHANG
PART 4: Centring Unequal Englishes in research
10 Unequal sounds: an inclusive mother-tongue approach to Philippine English phonology
ANNIE MAE C. BEROWA
11 Moroccan English through epistemological polylogue: opportunity for speaking back, hopes for localization, and the postcolonial framework
HAMZA R'BOUL, HASSAN BELHIAH, MOHAMMED GUAMGUAMI AND AHLAM LAMJAHDI
Way forward: Down to earth with Unequal Englishes
MARIO SARACENI
Ruanni Tupas presents rich insights into the inequalities of Englishes and the ways in which these inequalities shape and impact English and multilingual speakers from around the world.