Learning the Arts of Linguistic Survival: Languaging, Tourism, LifeMultilingual Matters, 10 nov. 2006 - 240 pages In this ground-breaking contribution to the study of tourism and languages, Alison Phipps examines what happens when tourists learn to speak other languages. From ordering a coffee to following directions she argues for a new perception of the relationship between tourism and languages from one based on the acquisition of basic, functional skills to one which sustains and even strengthens intercultural dialogue. The twelve chapters comprising this book tell stories of the experience of learning and speaking tourist languages. Drawing on a range of disciplines Alison Phipps takes the reader on a journey through risk, way finding, mistakes, laughter, conversations and the imagination. She provides rich descriptions of the world of language learning which has remained invisible to mainstream studies of language education, existing as it does on the margins of educational life. She shows how tourism is shaped by the learning experiences of everyday life. Languages, she argues passionately, fundamentally change the nature of perception, dwelling and relationships to other people and the world. This book will be essential reading for all those interested in tourism studies and in modern languages education. It is a timely study, coming at time of crisis in languages, as English exerts its power as a world language and as a dominant language of tourism. Learning the Arts of Linguistic Survival: Languaging, Tourism, Life will also be of interest to anthropologists, linguists, geographers, sociologists and those studying education. |
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... turn to my friends and speak to them in French. My partner speaks to me in English. I listen to the guide, and the commentary is German. Another guide moves forward and the place is animated with Portuguese. The tourists around me are ...
... turning to intercultural dialogue and modern languages we find a literature, political structures and international agencies seeking solutions to a vast range of human difficulties, but presenting not a solution in any practical sense ...
... turning the key of an unfamiliar wardrobe door , eating home - made guava jam and feeling the spectres of colonialism in life and language . And my story starts before this too , it begins in rooms built of concrete breeze blocks ...
... turn changed and challenged by encounters with others; • has an experience that is potentially more valuable, both for societies and for individuals. This opposition between the tourist – 'bad' – and other forms of travel, such as ...
... turn to de Certeau here and his distinction between strategies and tactics to illuminate the kinds of tensions are emerging here between the design and the desire of the curriculum . De Certeau ( 1984 : 37–9 ) sees ' tactics ' as ' a ...
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Learning the Arts of Linguistic Survival: Languaging, Tourism, Life Alison M. Phipps Affichage d'extraits - 2006 |