影响大还是没有优势?澳大利亚媒体对青少年多语性报道的种族语言学框架

IF 2.6 1区 文学 Q2 LINGUISTICS
Journal of Sociolinguistics Pub Date : 2026-04-09 Epub Date: 2026-01-08 DOI:10.1111/josl.70005
Naomi Fillmore, Hanna Torsh, Yanisa Jakklom
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文通过主要新闻媒体在2013年至2024年间发表的85篇新闻报道,研究了澳大利亚媒体对儿童多语言和语言教育的报道。运用关键的后结构框架和种族语言学视角,我们展示了相同的语言实践(多语和语言学习)是如何根据儿童的种族定位通过不同的意识形态镜头被框定的。虽然白人,单语儿童的语言学习一直通过竞争优势和认知利益的新自由主义意识形态来庆祝,但种族化儿童现有的多语能力被构建为需要干预的缺陷,障碍或威胁。这些不同的框架揭示了系统的种族语言等级制度,这些等级制度赋予白人特权,同时边缘化了土著和移民社区的语言实践。我们的研究结果揭示了媒体话语如何通过种族化框架积极构建和维持语言不平等,证明了研究语言和种族如何在公共话语中交叉的重要性,这对社会语言学在澳大利亚和其他移民-殖民背景下如何倡导儿童和年轻人的多语言能力具有重要意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Big Impact or No Advantage? Raciolinguistic Framings in Australian Media Coverage of Young People's Multilingualism

This article examines Australian media coverage of childhood multilingualism and language education through 85 news articles published between 2013 and 2024 across major news outlets. Using a critical post-structural framework and raciolinguistic perspective, we demonstrate how identical linguistic practices (multilingualism and language learning) are framed through different ideological lenses depending on children's racial positioning. While White, monolingual children's language learning is consistently celebrated through neoliberal ideologies of competitive advantage and cognitive benefit, racialised children's existing multilingualism is constructed as a deficit, barrier or threat requiring intervention. These differential framings reveal systematic raciolinguistic hierarchies that privilege Whiteness while marginalising Indigenous and migrant communities’ linguistic practices. Our findings reveal how media discourses actively construct and maintain linguistic inequalities through racialised framings, demonstrating the importance of examining how language and race intersect in public discourse, with significant implications for how sociolinguistics advocates for children and young people's multilingualism in the Australian and other settler-colonial contexts.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
10.50%
发文量
69
期刊介绍: Journal of Sociolinguistics promotes sociolinguistics as a thoroughly linguistic and thoroughly social-scientific endeavour. The journal is concerned with language in all its dimensions, macro and micro, as formal features or abstract discourses, as situated talk or written text. Data in published articles represent a wide range of languages, regions and situations - from Alune to Xhosa, from Cameroun to Canada, from bulletin boards to dating ads.
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