Abstract
Drawing on Kenyan hip-hop, this article: (1) illustrates the decolonial possibilities of translingualism, including paths to linguistic decolonization; (2) showcases how translingualism can facilitate the recovery of Indigenous hybrid languaging practices; (3) highlights how global Western capitalism threatens translingualism’s decolonial potential; and (4) offers further implications for rhetoric and writing scholars and teachers.
Publisher
National Council of Teachers of English
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Language and Linguistics,Education
Reference54 articles.
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2. Rhetorics of the Americas
3. “This Ain’t Another Statement! This is a DEMAND for Black Linguistic Justice!”;Baker-Bell;Conference on College Composition and Communication,2020
Cited by
1 articles.
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