Title: Cynthia Lewis
1Social Identities and Literacy Implications for
Research and Practice
- Cynthia Lewis
- University of Minnesota
2- Identities are positions that we take up,
temporarily, as though they are stable and
cohesive. Identity represents ways of being and
performing as members of certain groups as well
as the way our selfhood is recognized by others.
3Why Identity Should Matter to Literacy
Researchers
- Institutions tend to privilege a view of identity
as a fixed, stable set of characteristics. When
identity is viewed as fixed, then those
individuals who do not possess the expected set
of characteristics are often marginalized. - When the experiences, perceptions, and
relationships students value and the codes they
know are not acknowledged, they often learn that
literacy, including reading comprehension, is an
exclusive, limiting activity that diminishes
their efforts to construct expanded identities
4My Central Concern
- Im interested in how literacy practices are
legitimated, according to whose codes and
conventions, and with what consequences.
5Constructs of Identity in Literacy Research 35
Years
- First Wave 1970s-80s
- Identity as Stable and Unified ? Learner
experiences cultural conflict - Second Wave 1990s-2000s
- Identity as Negotiated and Performative ?Learner
as resourceful and positional - Third Wave 2000s-Present
- Identity as Hybrid, Meta-discursive, Spatial ?
Learner as multimodal bricoleur and spatial
navigator
6First Wave Identity through the Lens of Cultural
Conflict
- Identity as cultural affiliation with stable
characteristics - Importance Move away from deficit model
- Mismatch between home and school
7Key Studies
- McDermott (1977)
- Rodriguez (1982)
- Heath (1983)
- Delpit (1988)
- Hull Rose (1989)
8Why Identity Matters (revisited)
- Readers and writers are constructed through
linguistic and social codes that shape their
identities and their relationships to texts.
9Second Wave Identity as Negotiated and
Performative
- People employ literacy practices to resourcefully
mediate their identities in social settings. - These negotiated or performed identities shape
and are shaped by literacy practices that serve a
social function, positioning the individual in
relation to peers, family or institutional
authority.
10Second Wave Identity and Out-of-School Literacies
- Establishes literacy for powerful purposes and
identity representation - Expands what counts as literacy
- Illuminates how youth are positioned differently,
in terms of skill capacity, agency, and power, in
different contexts
11Key Studies
- Finders (1996)
- Mahiri Sablo (1997)
- Noll (1998)
- Alvermann (2001)
- Thomas (2004)
- Lewis Fabos (2005)
- Moje 2000)
12IM Study Lewis Fabos (2005)
- Sam This girl, she thinks Im somebody else.
She thinks Im one of her friends, and shes
like Hey! and Im like Hi! and I start
playing along with her. She thinks that Im one
of her school friends. She doesnt know its me.
She wrote to me twice now. - Interviewer So, shes this person that youre
lying to, almost. - Sam Yeah, you just play along. Its fun
sometimes. Its comical. Because shell say
something like, Oh a boy did this, and were
going to the ski house, or whatever, and Im
like Oh God!, and like Ill just respond to
her. Ill use the same exclamations where she
uses them and Ill try to talk like they do!
13Implications of Out-of-School Literacy Practices
- Classrooms should offer a space to build on
out-of-school literacy practices to negotiate and
critically examine systems and structures that
students deal with in their everyday lives but
that too often serve to marginalize students at
school and in other institutional contexts.
14Second Wave Identity and In-School Literacies
- Contesting institutional authority as readers
- Performing identities that resist, appropriate,
or transform ascribed ways of being in the world
(e.g. gender, class, and race) and social and
interpretive norms related to texts/contexts
15- Speakers, readers, and writers take up
positions in relation to the expectations of
others and the social and discursive codes
available within a given context. Individual and
group identities are defined through repeated
performances (ways of talking, listening,
writing, using one's body) as participants
perform the self, which is always in relation
to the group
16Critical Engagement
- A stance that combines immersion and critical
distance to develop an understanding of the
following - How readers position texts
- How texts position readers
- How texts and readers are situation in
sociopolitical contexts - (Lewis, Ketter, Fabos, 2001 Lewis, 2001)
17Critical Engagement in High-Poverty Urban High
School Classrooms
- Based on classroom responses to reviews and
scholarly articles about the film Pocahontas - The article discusses the concept of dominant
culture. The teacher asks what that means.
Vanessa, an African American student, responds
that its the white culture and that they
meaning native people in this case take on what
they white people do and how they act. As the
teacher reads on, Vanessa says Thats a lie.
18Second Wave Identity, In-School Example, Continued
- Vanessa asks what the article means by sexually
free. The author was critiquing the films
representation of native women as sexually free
in contrast to white women The teacher says it
means they are not as bound by rules and Vanessa
quickly adds white women are holier than holy.
Vanessa says she doesnt agree with that, but the
teacher asks if she agrees that the movie shows
that. Annie, who is a white student, points out
that in the film, Pocahontas wears something
off-the-shoulder, but that in England, with the
white people, her dress covers her neck. Shantia,
who is African American, says That is NOT true
and adds, as a side comment, that white girls are
not so pure. The teacher makes the distinction
that this is not about whats true but about
whether movies reinforce stereotypes. Vanessa
says movies make stereotypes worse.
19Second Wave Identity, In-School Example, Continued
- The white students are disturbed that the author
of the article and the students in class (the
African American, Latina, and Native students,
most of whom agree with the author) are ruining
an innocent movie for little kids. Annie also
says that if the movie addressed issues of racism
and genocide, it would not be suitable for kids.
20Alvermann, Hinchman, Moore, and Phelps, in
describing changes in the 2nd edition (2006)
- First a substantially greater number of students
voices are included in the second edition,
primarily to make visible their identity-making
practices, that is, the things they tell each
other and themselves about who they are as
literate beings and the actions such tellings
induce (p. xxii).
21Third Wave Identity asHybrid, Meta-discursive,
and Spatial
- Indentities are intertextual storylines that
intermingle, overlap, and sometimes conflict. - Identities are networked within global and local
flows of activity - Identities are produced through participatory
culture (Jenkins, 2006) - Identities are self-constructed in uncertain
times (Bean Moni, 2003 Gee, 2002 Wyn, 2005) - Identities have spatial and temporal
trajectories. They are not constituted in
moment-to-moment interaction. (Leander, 2002,
2004)
22Third-Wave Identity Edited Volumes
- Adolescents and Literacies in a Digital World
(Alvermann, 2002 - Spatializing Literacy and Practice (Leander
Sheehy, 2004) - What They Dont Learn In School Literacy in the
Lives of Urban Youth (Mahiri, 2004) - Reconstructing the Adolescent Sign, Symbol, and
Body (Vandeboncoeur Stevens, 2005 - Reframing Sociocultural Research on Literacy
Identity, Agency, and Power (Lewis, Enciso,
Moje, 2007
23Key Studies Digital and Transnational Spaces
- Blackburn (2003, 2005)
- Knobel Lankshear (2004)
- Leander (2004)
- Sarroub (2005)
- Leander Lovvorn (2006)
- Lam (2006)
- Moje Lewis (2007)
- Guerra (2007)
24Discussion and Implications
- Analytic rather than evaluative purposes.
- Goal To understand overarching movements and
that have shaped research and practice. - Not unidirectional, but loosely chronological and
recursive. - e.g. charter schools continue to to address
issues of cultural conflict. - Each identity construct suggests particular
research possibilities. - Larger social and cultural spheres determine, to
some degree, the identity constructs that are
most needed and most often taken up at a given
time.
25Zygmunt Bauman (2007). Liquid Times Living in an
Age of Uncertainty
- A life so fragmented stimulates lateral rather
than verticalorientations. - Each next step needs to be a response to a
different set of opportunities - and a different distribution of odds, and so it
calls for a different set of - skills and a different arrangement of assets.
Past successes do not necessarily - increase the probability of future victories, let
alone guarantee them while - means successfully tested in the past need to be
constantly inspected and - revised since they may prove useless or downright
counterproductive once - circumstances change. (p. 3)
26- Identity as an analytic tool in adolescent
literacy research typically has served to
challenge limited, one-dimensional definitions of
literacy and highlight the complex contextual
factors that enhance or restrict literacy
practices and capacities.
27- Thanks to Antillana del Valle, University of
Minnesota for her help on this project.