Available Formats
Literacies, Power and Identities in Figured Worlds in Malawi
By (Author) Dr Ahmmardouh Mjaya
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
24th March 2022
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literacy
374.0124096897
Hardback
184
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This book is based on an in-depth ethnographic study of the National Adult Literacy Programme (NALP) in Malawi. It highlights the significance of exploring power and identity in literacy studies. Employing the concept of figured worlds to study literacy as a social practice, the book focuses on understanding power relationships and identities in literacy practices. It illustrates how literacy identities and power relationships of some local community members continuously vary from one context to another and, in some cases, even within the same context. Using notions such as agency, artefact, resistance, shame and positioning, the book demonstrates the potential of the concept of figured worlds to address some of the questions raised within the New Literacy Studies especially those concerning power and identity. The book also illustrates the value of an ethnographic approach in adult literacy studies, by exploring the challenges faced by the researcher in gaining access to community members activities, and the opportunity to experience first-hand what instructors go through in facilitating adult literacy lessons.
Mjayas research provides valuable reading for literacy theorists and practitioners alike. ... [the] hope is that this book will inspire those engaged in literacy work with adults to renew their commitment to exploring new approaches to their fundamentally important task, complex though it is. * International Review of Education *
This book will be a rich and interesting source for students of international development, adult learning and literacy. It makes for accessible reading for policy-makers and teachers, as well as being a useful guide for others planning to carry out ethnographic studies in international settings. As a study by an African scholar of an under-researched country it is ground-breaking and illuminating. As long as literacy continues to be a focus of international agencies and funding, it is essential that policy learns from such studies. * Mary Hamilton, Emeritus Professor, Lancaster University, UK *
Ahmmardouh Mjaya is Lecturer in African Languages and Linguistics and a Ciyawo Language Specialist at Chancellor College, University of Malawi, Malawi.