LEADER 06555oam 2200613 c 450 001 9910954814803321 005 20260102090118.0 010 $a3-8382-7201-3 024 3 $a9783838272016 035 $a(CKB)4100000007376875 035 $a(MiAaPQ)EBC5782806 035 $a(ibidem)9783838272016 035 $a(EXLCZ)994100000007376875 100 $a20260102d2018 uy 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurcnu|||||||| 181 $ctxt$2rdacontent 182 $cc$2rdamedia 183 $acr$2rdacarrier 200 10$aMultilingual Construction of Identity $eGerman-Turkish Adolescents at School /$fIsil Erduyan, Gudrun Hentges, Anne Honer, Volker Hinnenkamp, Hans-Wolfgang Platzer 205 $a1st ed. 210 $aHannover$cibidem$d2018 215 $a1 online resource (xvi, 278 pages) $cillustrations 225 0 $aCINTEUS$v16 311 08$a3-8382-1201-0 320 $aIncludes bibliographical references. 327 $aIntro -- Abstract -- Acknowledgements -- Table of Contents -- Preface -- 1 Introduction to the Study -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Rationale for the Study and Research Questions -- 1.3 A Demographic Profile -- 1.3.1 Turkish Migration to Berlin -- 1.3.2 Turkish Community in Kreuzberg -- 1.3.3 Students with Immigrant Background in the Berlin School System: Population Facts -- 1.4 Plan of the Book -- 2 Situating the Study -- 2.1 Epistemological and Paradigmatic Considerations -- 2.2 Theoretical Framework -- 2.2.1 Wortham's perspective of identity -- 2.2.2 Bakhtinian notion of chronotopes -- 2.3 Linguistic Ethnographic Methodology -- 2.4 Establishing the Terminology: Identity Ascriptions -- 2.5 Situating Multilingualism and Multilingual Speakers -- 3 Review of Literature -- 3.1 Multilingualism and Identity in Contemporary Europe -- 3.2 Immigrant Youth Language Practices -- 3.3 Identity in Multilingual Classroom Research -- 4 Methodological Choices -- 4.1 Locating the Research Site -- 4.1.1 The Tracking System in German Secondary Education -- 4.1.3 Berlin Central High School (BCHS) -- 4.1.4 Turkish, German, and English Instruction at BCHS -- 4.1.5 The Physical Setting -- 4.2 Negotiating Access -- 4.2.1 Gaining Entry -- 4.2.2 Gaining Access -- 4.3 Participants -- 4.3.1 Deniz -- 4.3.2 Yelda -- 4.3.3 Mert -- 4.3.4 Simla -- 4.3.5 Ela -- 4.3.6 Other Actors -- 4.4 Generating the Ethnographic Data -- 4.4.1 Classroom Observations -- 4.4.2 Audio-Recordings of Classroom Interactions -- 4.4.3 Taking Fieldnotes -- 4.4.4 Interviews -- 4.5 Methods of Data Analysis and Interpretation -- 4.5.1 Choosing Analytical Tools -- 4.5.2 Transcribing the Interactional Data -- 4.6 Ethnographic Design Study Concerns -- 4.6.1 Strategies for Validating Findings -- 4.6.2 Ethical Considerations -- 5 Local Construction of Identity in the German Classroom -- 5.1 Introduction. 327 $a5.2 Setting the Scene: 9th Grade German -- 5.3 Yelda and Deniz -- 5.3.1 "We can never in our lives speak like these" -- 5.3.2 Mocking Oneself -- 5.3.3 Lacking Participation: "Words are missing" -- 5.3.4 Multilingual Word Search -- 5.4 Mert -- 5.4.1 Super German - Normal German - High German -- 5.4.2 Flying Solo -- 5.4.3 Managing the Micropolitics of Group Work -- 5.5 Simla and Ela -- 5.5.1 Ela: "?because our mother tongue is not German" -- 5.5.2 Teacher as Peer -- 5.5.3 Intermediary in Group Work -- 5.5.4 Ela's Displeasure -- 5.6 Chapter Summary -- 6 Local Construction of Identity in the Turkish Classroom -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Setting the Scene: 9th and 10th Grade Turkish -- 6.3 Yelda -- 6.3.1 The Grammar Expert -- 6.3.2 Turkey-Turkish Colloquial as a Resource Kit -- 6.4 Simla -- 6.4.1 Turkish as a Matter of Challenging Self -- 6.4.2 Experimenting with Ottoman Turkish -- 6.5 Mert -- 6.5.1 Urban Turkey-Turkish Forms -- 6.5.2 Embracing Neoconservativism -- 6.6 Ela -- 6.6.1 Ela's Originality -- 6.6.2 Being Modern -- 6.7 Chapter Summary -- 7 Local Construction of Identity in the English Classroom -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Setting the Scene: 9th and 10th Grade English -- 7.3 Deniz -- 7.3.1 Enacting Criticality -- 7.3.2 Role-play as a Safe House -- 7.4 Yelda -- 7.4.1 Lost in Listening -- 7.4.2 Constructing Distance -- 7.5 Mert -- 7.5.1 Enacting Masculinity -- 7.5.2 Content with English -- 7.6 Simla -- 7.6.1 Making Reception Work -- 7.6.2 Teasing and Dueling in Group Work -- 7.7 Ela -- 7.7.1 Constructing Intolerance -- 7.7.2 Impatience in Group Work -- 7.8 Chapter Summary -- 8 Discussion and Conclusion -- 8.1 Multilingual Construction of Identity -- 8.2 Timescales and Chronotopes -- 8.3 Limitations to the Study -- 8.4 Directions for Future Research -- Appendix A -- Appendix B1 -- Appendix B2 -- Appendix B3 -- Appendix C -- Appendix D -- Appendix E. 327 $aAppendix F -- References. 330 $aReporting on a linguistic ethnographic study, I??l Erduyan explores multilingual identity construction of high school students with Turkish descent enrolled in a downtown high school (Gymnasium) in Berlin. She focuses on naturally occurring classroom interactions across German, Turkish, and English classes and attends to the complex relationship between identities and multilingual repertoires through a scalar analytical perspective. Her findings demonstrate how multilingual students? linguistic repertoires are bound by linguistic performances within and across multiple timescales. The study takes an innovative path by attending to the everyday linguistic practices of a group of multilingual immigrant students with the same national background through linguistic ethnographic lenses in the context of mainstream schooling in Europe, and by focusing on a much-understudied group, namely higher achieving students of immigrant descent enrolled in a German high school. 410 0$aInterdisciplinary series of the Centre for Intercultural and European Studies ;$v16. 606 $aMultilingual 606 $aMehrsprachigkeit 606 $aIdentity 606 $aIdentität 606 $aIntegration 615 4$aMultilingual 615 4$aMehrsprachigkeit 615 4$aIdentity 615 4$aIdentität 615 4$aIntegration 676 $a407.114355 700 $aErduyan$b Isil$cDr.$4aut$01836191 702 $aHentges$b Gudrun$4edt 702 $aHoner$b Anne$4edt 702 $aHinnenkamp$b Volker$4edt 702 $aPlatzer$b Hans-Wolfgang$4edt 801 0$bMiAaPQ 801 1$bMiAaPQ 801 2$bMiAaPQ 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910954814803321 996 $aMultilingual Construction of Identity$94414031 997 $aUNINA