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Blog Project Description
Blog Project Description
The 2016 Presidential campaign and its aftermath highlight the volatile intersections between
national identity, language diversity, and immigration in the United States. The barrage of daily
news stories flashing photos of refugees and immigrants being turned away at airports or arrested
and deported, as well as the resulting social, economic, and legal entanglements, disturbs us as we
currently navigate the immigration process together with our 11-year-old daughter. Further, we
recognize these developments as the most recent in a long history of discrimination of people who
travel here to work, learn, and build lives based not only on economic opportunity but also on the
fundamentals of democracy, all of which explicitly involve the processes of translating meaning
across many cultures and languages. The English language and its use as a lingua franca in this
country does not subordinate the multiplicity of heritage languages, dialects, and cultures through
which individuals and members of communities understand themselves in the United States
However labeled, multi-, pluri-, trans-, daily realities here constantly emerge through many
languages, dialects, and language practices.
In this context, we are putting our training as English as a Second Language (ESL) educators to
work, reporting evidence of language diversity and opening conversations with colleagues, friends,
and family members about the role of multiple languages and cultures in shaping everyday meaning
and communication along our journey from Kentucky to the Pacific Northwest. The four questions
below guide us:
In what ways are English and its use diverse along our route?
What language practices shape this diversity?
Who is shaped by these practices and how?
How does all of this matter locally, nationally, and internationally?
The resulting narrative on Twitter, Instagram, and our WordPress blog, we hope, will bring our
previous research and experience, discoveries along our journey, discussions with you, and
conversations at two academic conferences to bear on the larger debates over language diversity,
national identity, and immigration.