Language, identity online and running / Nur Kurtoğlu-Hooton.
2021
HM851
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Title
Language, identity online and running / Nur Kurtoğlu-Hooton.
Author
ISBN
9783030818319 (electronic bk.)
3030818314 (electronic bk.)
3030818306
9783030818302
3030818314 (electronic bk.)
3030818306
9783030818302
Published
Cham, Switzerland : Palgrave Macmillan, 2021.
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (1 volume) : illustrations (black and white)
Item Number
10.1007/978-3-030-81831-9 doi
Call Number
HM851
Dewey Decimal Classification
302.231
Summary
This book focuses on language and identity online within the context of running from an interdisciplinary perspective. It brings together digital ethnography, existential phenomenology, interpretative phenomenological analysis and sporting embodiment in the pursuit to explore runners lived experiences and identities online. Language, identity and identity online are often studied in broader social contexts such as education, culture and politics, and running is intimately related to key issues in contemporary society, such as health and exercise, sport and nationalism, embracing a variety of discourse types and having implications more generally for our identity as human beings. The evolving online media through which people make sense of who they are and which groups they belong to are enabling new ways of realising identities and relationships. This book will be of interest to applied linguists, discourse analysts, as well as those interested in sports, sports psychology, and identity enactment. Nur Kurtoglu-Hooton is Lecturer in English Language at Aston University, UK. She has experience of working on a range of teacher education research projects in the fields of teacher development and technology in teaching and learning, with language teachers in the UK and overseas. She has previously published one of her teacher education projects into post-observation feedback under the title Confirmatory Feedback in Teacher Education: An Instigator of Student Teacher Learning (2016, Palgrave Macmillan). Her research interests include teacher development, technology in teaching and learning, and social media research, particularly in the sport of running.
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Includes index.
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Table of Contents
Introduction
PART I
Chapter 1: Running groups online as communities of practice
Chapter 2: 'Stuff' runners discuss on social network sites
PART II
Chapter 3: Runners language
Chapter 4: How runners shift their running identities
PART III: Running trajectories
Chapter 5: Chapter 5: thewelshrunner
Chapter 6: fiona_slimmingworld_diaries
Chapter 7: James Elson
Chapter 8: nur_therunnur
Conclusion.
PART I
Chapter 1: Running groups online as communities of practice
Chapter 2: 'Stuff' runners discuss on social network sites
PART II
Chapter 3: Runners language
Chapter 4: How runners shift their running identities
PART III: Running trajectories
Chapter 5: Chapter 5: thewelshrunner
Chapter 6: fiona_slimmingworld_diaries
Chapter 7: James Elson
Chapter 8: nur_therunnur
Conclusion.