“Women are capable too!” Exploring intersectionality and challenging CaLD gender stereotypes at Australian universities

IF 1.3 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
TESOL Journal Pub Date : 2024-02-21 DOI:10.1002/tesj.806
Ana Tankosić, Sender Dovchin
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

With a focus on Culturally and Linguistically Diverse (CaLD) women, this article will discuss the underlying gender inequalities and stereotypes these women experience in Australian tertiary institutions through reflections of translingual discrimination. Translingual discrimination refers to the ideologies and practices that produce unequal linguistic power relationships between CaLD communities and dominant communities of the host society, focusing on the central role that language plays in the enduring relevance of discrimination disparity. Because of CaLD women's translingual identities, these groups experience such aspects of translingual discrimination as accentism, naming practices, linguistic subordination, deskilling, and stereotyping, which eventually affect their well‐being and economic security. CaLD women need a linguistically and culturally “safe space” where they will be supported and appreciated based on their capabilities and skills and not subjected to objectification, femininity evaluations, and derogatory actions. Opportunities for women should persist because, unfortunately, in men‐dominated fields, these opportunities are still necessary to support and include women.
"女性也有能力!"在澳大利亚大学探索交叉性和挑战 CaLD 性别陈规定型观念
本文将以文化和语言多样性(CaLD)女性为重点,通过对跨语言歧视的反思,讨论这些女性在澳大利亚高等院校中经历的潜在性别不平等和陈规定型观念。跨语言歧视指的是在 CaLD 群体和东道国社会的主流群体之间产生不平等语言权力关系的意识形态和做法,重点是语言在歧视差异的持久相关性中发挥的核心作用。由于 CaLD 妇女的跨语言身份,这些群体经历了口音歧视、命名惯例、语言从属地位、文职工作和刻板印象等方面的跨语言歧视,最终影响了她们的福祉和经济安全。CaLD 妇女需要一个语言和文化上的 "安全空间",在这个空间里,她们将根据自己的 能力和技能得到支持和赞赏,而不会受到物化、女性评价和贬损。为妇女提供的机会应该继续存在,因为不幸的是,在男性占主导地位的领域,这些机 会对于支持和包容妇女仍然是必要的。
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来源期刊
TESOL Journal
TESOL Journal EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
7.10%
发文量
54
期刊介绍: TESOL Journal (TJ) is a refereed, practitioner-oriented electronic journal based on current theory and research in the field of TESOL. TJ is a forum for second and foreign language educators at all levels to engage in the ways that research and theorizing can inform, shape, and ground teaching practices and perspectives. Articles enable an active and vibrant professional dialogue about research- and theory-based practices as well as practice-oriented theorizing and research.
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