"RIP English": Race, class and 'good English' in India (MOSAIC Seminar)

Location
224 Education Building
Dates
Thursday 14 November 2024 (14:00-15:30)
Contact

Kamran Khan

Katy Highet Photo
Katy Highet, Lecturer, University of West Scotland

Katy Highet, Lecturer, University of West Scotland

This presentation explores how discourses of “bad” English in India are mobilized in ways that allow actors to negotiate their status as English speakers. Drawing on a YouTube video from a popular streamer from Mumbai, I show how the co-naturalization of language and race shapes assessments of competency and legitimacy, and how this is mitigated through anti-Blackness and appeals to class status. These judgments of “good” and “bad” English work to reassert and undermine racialized authority over the language and position actors within an imagined, global stratified community of speakers. This ambivalent positioning not only helps actors negotiate relational legitimacy as English speakers but also works strategically to benefit certain speakers and reproduce colonial, class, and racial orders.  

Biography

Dr Katy Highet is a Lecturer in English Language & TESOL at the University of the West of Scotland, and was previously an ESRC Postdoctoral Fellow at UCL Institute of Education. She is currently leading a Carnegie Trust funded research project on ESOL and activism in Glasgow. Her research interests lie in Critical Sociolinguistics, Ethnography, Political Economy, Language Ideologies, and Critique. Her work has been published in the Journal of Sociolinguistics, International Journal of the Sociology of Language, Journal of Linguistic Anthropology, London Review of Education, and Routledge edited volumes.

Registration is essential.

  • This event is free and open to the public, staff and students.
  • This event is in-person only.  
  • Please note, this seminar is not being recorded.