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“I mean, I like English even better than Turkish”: English-speaking Students as Multilingual Transnationals
Author(s) -
Işıl Erduyan
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
eurasian journal of applied linguistics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.199
H-Index - 3
ISSN - 2149-1135
DOI - 10.32601/ejal.599250
Subject(s) - turkish , german , homeland , narrative , focus group , sociology , identity (music) , gender studies , pedagogy , political science , psychology , linguistics , anthropology , law , art , aesthetics , politics , philosophy
Focusing on a group of multilingual German-Turkish students enrolled at an urban high-school in Berlin, this paper inquires how ELF identities and transnational experiences inform each other. Semi-structured, audio-recorded interviews conducted as part of a larger project (Erduyan, 2019) are analyzed through microethnographic lenses informed by a scalar approach. Following Lam (2009) and Maloney & De Costa (2017) the analyses focus on the  local ,  translocal , and  transnational  scales that permeate students’ narratives. Findings suggest that being ELF users/speakers help Turkish students fill in a gap that they perceive they cannot fill in by being Turkish or German speakers alone, that of being cosmopolitan, global citizens with transnational experience. Findings also suggest the changing meanings of homeland for Turkish students —from the traditional, monolingual, provincial Turkey to a more urban, cosmopolitan Turkey. The inevitable implications of these changes for identity construction are discussed further in the article.

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