Designing interpretive communities toward justice: indexicality in classroom discourse
English Teaching: Practice & Critique
ISSN: 2059-5727
Article publication date: 18 January 2022
Issue publication date: 17 March 2022
Abstract
Purpose
This study aims to investigate how, through text-based classroom talk, youth collaboratively draw on and remix discourses and practices from multiple socially indexed traditions.
Design/methodology/approach
Drawing on data from a year-long social design experiment, this study uses qualitative coding and traces discoursal markers of indexicality.
Findings
The youth sustained, remixed and evaluated interpretive communities in their navigation across disciplinary and fandom discourses to construct a hybrid classroom interpretive community.
Originality/value
This research contributes to scholarship that supports using popular texts in classrooms as the focus of a scholarly inquiry by demonstrating how youth in one high school English classroom discursively index interpretive communities aligned with popular fandoms and literary scholarship. This study adds to understandings about the social nature of literary reading, interpretive whole-class text-based talk and literary literacies with multimodal texts in diverse, high school classrooms.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
Funding: This research was supported in part by a grant from the International Literacy Association.
Citation
Storm, S., Jones, K. and Beck, S.W. (2022), "Designing interpretive communities toward justice: indexicality in classroom discourse", English Teaching: Practice & Critique, Vol. 21 No. 1, pp. 2-15. https://doi.org/10.1108/ETPC-06-2021-0073
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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