The social construction of meaning : reading literature in urban English classrooms
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Bibliographic Information
The social construction of meaning : reading literature in urban English classrooms
(Routledge research in education, 105)
Routledge, 2016
- : pbk
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Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book takes a fresh look at secondary urban English classrooms and at what happens when students and their teachers explore literature collaboratively. By closely examining what happens in English lessons, minute by minute, it reveals how literary texts function not as a valorised heritage to be transmitted, but as a resource for the students' work of cultural production and contestation.
The reading that is undertaken in classrooms has tended to be construed as either a poor substitute or merely a preparation for other reading, particularly for that paradigmatic literacy event, the absorbed and simultaneously discriminating consumption of the literary text by the independent, private reader. This book argues for a different understanding of what constitutes reading, an understanding that is informed by historical and ethnographic perspectives and by psychological and semiotic theory. It presents the case for a conception of reading as an active, collaborative process of meaning-making and for a fully social model of learning. Drawing extensively on data gathered through classroom observation and filming of English lessons taught over the course of a year by two teachers in a London secondary school, the book explores students' engagement with literary texts and the pedagogy that facilitates this engagement.
The book offers new insights into reading, and reading literature in particular. It challenges the paradigm of reading that is offered in government policy and the assumption, common to much work within the field of 'new literacies', that 'schooled literacy' is the already-known, the default, against which the alternative literacy practices of homes and communities can be defined. It will be valuable reading for researchers, teachers, teacher educators and postgraduate students, and will have particular appeal for those with an interest in the fields of English studies and literacy.
Table of Contents
1: Introduction 2: Social Theories of the Sign and of Learning 3: Literacies and Literature 4: Reading Classrooms: Towards a Methodology 5: Investigating Literacy Practices within the Secondary English Classroom, or Where is the Text in this Class? 6: Literature and Representation: the Text, the Classroom and the World Outside 7:Class Readers: Exploring a Different View from the Bridge 8: Embodied Readings: the Multimodal Social Semiotic Work of the English Classroom 9: Reading Together over Time 10: Agency, Interest and Multimodal Design as Evidence of Reading 11: Mind the Gap: Investigating Test Literacy and Classroom Literacy 12: Conclusion
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