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Worlding geography: From linguistic privilege to decolonial anywheres

Müller, Martin

Progress in human geography, 2021-12, Vol.45 (6), p.1440-1466 [Periódico revisado por pares]

London, England: SAGE Publications

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  • Título:
    Worlding geography: From linguistic privilege to decolonial anywheres
  • Autor: Müller, Martin
  • Assuntos: Anglophones ; Decolonization ; Ethnolinguistic groups ; Geography ; Human geography ; Knowledge ; Linguistics ; Race ; Social privilege
  • É parte de: Progress in human geography, 2021-12, Vol.45 (6), p.1440-1466
  • Descrição: Geography studies the world. Our knowledge of the world, however, comes mostly from Anglophone sources. This makes Geography in urgent need of worlding – of including multiple voices and languages from around the world. Introducing the notion of linguistic privilege, the article establishes language as an important dimension of epistemic struggle, alongside gender, race, class and others. Its analysis finds the greatest linguistic privilege in the most influential positions in knowledge production – editors of handbooks and journals and authors of progress reports. Three strategies of worlding should challenge this: making gatekeepers multilingual, promoting multiple Englishes and valorising ex-centric knowledge.
  • Editor: London, England: SAGE Publications
  • Idioma: Inglês

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