At Last: The Trouble with English

Allan Luke Nanyang Technological University

Abstract

So much has been made over the crisis in English literature as field, as corpus, and as canon in recent years, that some of it undoubtedly has spilled over into English education. This has been the case in predominantly English-speaking Anglo-American and Commonwealth nations, as well as in those postcolonial states where English remains the medium of instruction and lingua franca of economic and cultural elites. Yet to attribute the pressures for change in pedagogic practice to academic paradigm shift per se would prop up the shaky axiom that English education is forever caught in some kind of perverse evolutionary time-lag, parasitic of university literary studies. I, too, believe that English education has reached a crucial moment in its history, but that this moment is contingent upon the changing demographics, cultural knowledges, and practices of economic globalization.

Journal
Research in the Teaching of English
Published
2004-08-01
DOI
10.58680/rte20044463
Open Access
OA PDF Green
Topics

Citation Context

Cited by in this index (3)

  1. College English
  2. Research in the Teaching of English
  3. Research in the Teaching of English

Cites in this index (0)

No references match articles in this index.

CrossRef global citation count: 40 View in citation network →