Eunjeong Lee

4 articles

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Who Reads Lee

Eunjeong Lee's work travels primarily in Composition & Writing Studies (66% of indexed citations) · 3 total indexed citations from 2 clusters.

By cluster

  • Composition & Writing Studies — 2
  • Rhetoric — 1

Counts include only citations from indexed journals that deposit reference lists with CrossRef. Authors whose readers publish primarily in venues without reference deposits will appear less central than they are. See coverage notes →

  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. Coalition Building against Anti-Asian Racism: Interweaving Stories of Transnational Asian/American Feminist Survivance
  4. 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