'We throw away our books': Students' reading practices and identities
被引:4
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作者:
O'Shea, Cathy
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机构:
Univ Ft Hare, Private Bag x1314,King Williams Town Rd, ZA-5700 Alice, South AfricaUniv Ft Hare, Private Bag x1314,King Williams Town Rd, ZA-5700 Alice, South Africa
O'Shea, Cathy
[1
]
McKenna, Sioux
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机构:
Rhodes Univ, POB 94, ZA-6140 Grahamstown, South AfricaUniv Ft Hare, Private Bag x1314,King Williams Town Rd, ZA-5700 Alice, South Africa
McKenna, Sioux
[2
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论文数: 引用数:
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机构:
Thomson, Carol
[2
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机构:
[1] Univ Ft Hare, Private Bag x1314,King Williams Town Rd, ZA-5700 Alice, South Africa
[2] Rhodes Univ, POB 94, ZA-6140 Grahamstown, South Africa
The aim of this research was to understand university students' self-reported reading practices. The students attended the University of Fort Hare in South Africa, a historically black institution in a rural and under-resourced setting. A framework of New Literacy Studies (NLS) was used to understand students' self-reported reading practices and the links between these and their identities. Tools provided by Gee (2005, 2011) were applied to conduct a CDA of focus group discussions. In the 'We Blacks' Discourse, interviewees 'othered' the idea of reading as not being culturally valued. It was closely allied to the Resistance to Reading Discourse, as participants explained that they tended to disregard books and did not enjoy leisure reading. The Setter Than Us' discourse was drawn upon to suggest that reading was associated with attitudes of superiority. These discourses tended to homogenise class and other differences between black students and indicated the ways in which their experiences made adopting academic identities difficult. The analysis suggests that the racism of the past continues to impact students' reading identities. The article concludes that the effects of these and related discourses require a response across the education sector, and transformative pedagogies might be needed in higher education. (C) 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.