English is deeply embedded within recent neoliberal projects of social reformation in South Korea, becoming a central topic of contention in the controversial educational reforms of the Lee Myung-bak regime (2008–2012). It figured prominently in various changes to the Korean education system pursued by the Lee administration under the name of greater competitiveness, such as increasing English immersion instruction in public schools and opening greater number of special purpose high schools where English language skills are highlighted. Lee’s policies on the one hand aimed to cater to middle-class parents’ desire for better educational opportunities that drive the Korean education fever; but on the other hand, they also fueled that very desire by inserting English into a neoliberal social order and imbuing it with cultural significance. Here, the indexical nature of language – how “good English” comes to be interpreted as embodied evidence of not only one’s educational attainment but also one’s previous transnational trajectories, thus positioning the speaker as an experienced cosmopolitan well prepared for “global competition” – plays a central role, as it naturalizes and justifies the classed nature of neoliberal projects despite continued contestation and debate.
2015. English, Tracking, and Neoliberalization of Education in South Korea. TESOL Quarterly 49:4 ► pp. 867 ff.
Cho, Hyesun & Lizette Peter
2016. Taking the TESOL Practicum Abroad. In Handbook of Research on Efficacy and Implementation of Study Abroad Programs for P-12 Teachers [Advances in Higher Education and Professional Development, ], ► pp. 149 ff.
Cho, Hyesun & Lizette Peter
2019. Taking the TESOL Practicum Abroad. In Pre-Service and In-Service Teacher Education, ► pp. 737 ff.
Cho, Jinhyun
2017. Ideologies of Global and Local English. In English Language Ideologies in Korea [Multilingual Education, 23], ► pp. 13 ff.
Cho, Jinhyun
2017. The Genealogy of English in Korea. In English Language Ideologies in Korea [Multilingual Education, 23], ► pp. 43 ff.
Cho, Jinhyun
2017. Introduction. In English Language Ideologies in Korea [Multilingual Education, 23], ► pp. 1 ff.
Ito, Rika
2020. North Pillow Brings Bad Luck: Construction of Ideologies of English in a Japanese TV Drama, Massan. Japanese Studies 40:2 ► pp. 141 ff.
Jahan, Iffat & M. Obaidul Hamid
2019. English as a medium of instruction and the discursive construction of elite identity. Journal of Sociolinguistics 23:4 ► pp. 386 ff.
Jenks, Christopher
2019. English for sale: Using race to create value in the Korean ELT market
. Applied Linguistics Review 10:4 ► pp. 517 ff.
Jenks, Christopher J. & Jerry Won Lee
2020. Native speaker saviorism: a racialized teaching ideology. Critical Inquiry in Language Studies 17:3 ► pp. 186 ff.
Peck, Catherine & Lynda Yates
2019. Negotiating intercultural experience through English as a foreign language in South Korea. Language and Intercultural Communication 19:1 ► pp. 51 ff.
Pennycook, Alastair
2020. Translingual entanglements of English. World Englishes 39:2 ► pp. 222 ff.
Rüdiger, Sofia
2014. The nativization of English in the Korean context: Uncharted territory for World Englishes. English Today 30:4 ► pp. 11 ff.
Seo, Youngjoo
2023. Development and application of an anti-racist approach in English language teaching: from theory to practice. Asia Pacific Journal of Education► pp. 1 ff.
Seo, Youngjoo
2023. Why can’t I teach English? A case study of the racialized experiences of a female Ugandan teacher of English in an EFL context. Applied Linguistics Review 0:0
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 6 september 2023. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
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