Available Formats
Disciplinarity: Functional Linguistic and Sociological Perspectives
By (Author) Frances Christie
Edited by Karl Maton
Continuum Publishing Corporation
Continuum Publishing Corporation
3rd February 2011
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
415
Hardback
272
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
552g
Disciplinary knowledge is under threat in the modern world. Claims abound that we are entering a landscape in which the division of disciplines is obsolete, implying a commitment to outdated values in scholarship. Notions of discipline' are critiqued as reflecting social power and representing the worldview of dominant social groups.
By addressing and challenging such claims, this edited collection argues that proclamations of the death of disciplines have been greatly overstated. Not only are the notions of disciplinarity still important for understanding how we come to know the world, but this volume demonstrates how significant disciplinarity is to understanding different forms of knowledge if we wish to improve the building of knowledge and educational practice.
Using analytical tools from systemic functional linguistics theory and social realist sociology, this volume illustrates how different disciplines can collaborate and cross-fertilize successfully, without losing their distinctive insights and disciplinary integrity. The subsequent theory developed will thereby extend both linguistic and sociological approaches to the topic and make a major contribution to educational theory.
'A timely and challenging text that brings together cutting edge thinking on disciplinarity and interdisciplinarity by leading social realist scholars and work on functional linguistics inspired by Halliday and Hasan.' -- John Beck, Director of Studies in Education, Selwyn College, University of Cambridge, UK
Frances Christie is Emeritus Professor of Language and Literacy Education at the University of Melbourne, Australia and Honorary Professor at the University of Sydney, Australia.
Karl Maton is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the Faculty of Arts, University of Sydney, Australia.