Research Output
A Critical Auto/Ethnography of Learning Spanish: Intercultural Competence on the Gringo Trail?
  The premise that intercultural contact produces intercultural competence underpins much rationalization of backpacker tourism and in-country language education. However, if insufficiently problematized, pre-existing constructions of cultural 'otherness' may hinder intercultural competence development. This is nowhere truer than in contexts in which wide disparities of power, wealth, and privilege exist, and where such positionings may go unproblematized. This study contributes to theoretical understandings of how intercultural competence develops through intercultural contact situations through a detailed, multiple case study of three conceptually comparable contexts in which Western backpackers study Spanish in Latin America. This experience, often 'bundled' with home-stay, volunteer work, social, and tourist experiences, offers a rich set of empirical data within which to understand the nature of intercultural competence and the processes through which it may be developed. Models of a single, context-free, transferable intercultural competence are rejected. Instead, suggestions are made as to how educators might help prepare intercultural sojourners by scaffolding their intercultural reflections and problematizing their own intersectional identities and their assumptions. The study is a critical ethnography with elements of autoethnographic reflection. The book therefore also contributes to development of this qualitative research methodology and provides an empirical example of its application.

  • Type:

    Authored Book

  • Date:

    31 January 2017

  • Publication Status:

    Published

  • Publisher

    Routledge

  • Library of Congress:

    P Language and Literature

  • Dewey Decimal Classification:

    306 Culture & institutions

  • Funders:

    University of South Wales

Citation

Stanley, P. (2017). A Critical Auto/Ethnography of Learning Spanish: Intercultural Competence on the Gringo Trail?. Taylor & Francis

Authors

Keywords

Spanish, volunteer tourism, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Peru, criticality, intercultural competence, Español como lengua extranjera (ELE).

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