Eunjeong Lee

3 articles
University of Houston ORCID: 0000-0002-2310-5935
  1. Managing Anti-Asian Violence: White “Hate” Discourses in the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act in the Aftermath of the 3.16 Shootings
    doi:10.1080/02773945.2025.2567288
  2. Knowing, Feeling, and Doing Language with Communities: Racialized Multilingual Students’ Critical Raciolinguistic Labor
    Abstract

    Preview this article: Knowing, Feeling, and Doing Language with Communities: Racialized Multilingual Students' Critical Raciolinguistic Labor, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/ce/86/3/collegeenglish863244-1.gif

    doi:10.58680/ce2024863244
  3. Writing Toward a Decolonial Option: A Bilingual Student’s Multimodal Composing as a Site of Translingual Activism and Justice
    Abstract

    Drawing on discussions of (de)coloniality and translanguaging, this article reports findings from a classroom-based ethnographic study, focusing on how a self-identified Latina bilingual student resists colonial constructs of language and literacies in her multimodal project. Based on an analysis of the student’s multimodal composition, other classroom writings, and a semistructured interview, I examine how she creatively and critically draws on her entire language and literacy repertoire in her multimodal composing. More specifically, I demonstrate how she draws from and builds on her lived experiences of linguistic injustices and racialization and transforms such experiences into embodied knowledge making and sharing through her multimodal composing. I argue that students’ engagement with multimodality can and should be cultivated, sustained, and amplified as a site of translingual activism and justice with decolonial potential, and I suggest, further, that such a shift requires a change in approaching, reading, and valuing students’ multimodal meaning making.

    doi:10.1177/07410883221134640