Are TESOL professionals now fairly seen as agents of a new English-speaking empire? Or, if they wish to distance themselves from this role, are there ways of working and living that would make this differentiation clear? An international group of authors put forward their differing proposals for the development of TESOL.
SARAH BENESCH Professor of English, College of Staten Island, City University of New York, USA
CHRISTOPHER BRUMFIT was Chair in Applied Linguistics, School of Humanities, University of Southampton, UK
BRANCA FALABELLA FABRÍCIO Lecturer at Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
MARNIE HOLBOROW Lecturer in ESOL, Dublin City University, Republic of Ireland
BILL JOHNSTON Associate Professor of TESOL and Applied Linguistics, Indiana University, USA
JOHN KATUNICH Lecturer in the English Department of the Faculty of Foreign Studies, University of Kitakyushu, Japan
RYUKO KUBOTA Associate Professor, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA
B. KUMARAVADIVELU Professor of Applied Linguistics and TESOL, San Jose State University, California, USA
AYA MATSUDA Assistant Professor of Applied Linguistics, University of New Hampshire, USA
DENISE SANTOS Sessional Lecturer at Reading University, UK
ABDEL LATIF SELLAMI Assistant Professor of Composition and Linguistics, Zayed University, Duabi, UAE
MANKA M. VARGHESE Assistant Professor in Language, Literacy, and Culture, University of Washington, Seattle, USA
PAUL WOODS Manages the British Council's Peacekeeping English Project in 27 countries, mainly in Central/Eastern Europe and Central Asia
Notes on the Contributors Background and Overview; J.Edge Dangerous Liaison: Globalization, Empire and TESOL; B.Kumaravadivelu What, Then, Must We Do? Or Who Gets Hurt When We Speak, Write and Teach?; C.Brumfit Critical Media Awareness: Teaching Resistance to Interpellation; S.Benesch The (Re-)Framing Process as a Collaborative Locus for Change; B.F.Fabrício & D.Santos Ideology and Language: Interconnections between Neo-liberalism and English; M.Holborow Non-judgmental Discourse: Role and Relevance; J.Edge Teaching Second Languages for National Security Purposes: A Case of Post 9/11 USA; R.Kubota Equity and English in South African Higher Education: Ambiguity and Colonial Language Legacy; J.Katunich Negotiating ELT Assumptions in EIL Classrooms; A.Matsuda Slaves of Sex, Money and Alcohol: (Re-)Locating the Target Culture of TESOL; A.L.Sellami Neo-imperialism, Evangelism, and ELT: Modernist Missions and a Post-modern Profession; B.Johnston & M.M.Varghese 'The Hedgehog and the Fox': Two Approaches to English for the Military; P.Woods Index