10.01.2018 - By Anthropological Airwaves
In Season 2, Episode 1 of Anthropological Airwaves, we talk with Adrienne Lo (Waterloo) and Jonathan Rosa (Stanford) about race and language in Korea and the United States. In conversation with Kristina Nielsen and Diego Arispe-Bazán, Lo and Rosa identify and critique the ways that different kinds of English, and by extension the speakers of these different kinds of English, are understood through racialized lenses in varying contexts. These racialized stereotypes of groups of people based on how they are perceived to speak spill over into many social domains, affecting everything from educational policy in the US to economic advancement in Korea. Full episode transcript.
Credits:
Interviewer: Kristina Nielsen & Diego Arispe-Bazán
Producer: Diego Arispe-Bazán
Editors: Diego Arispe-Bazán and Kyle Olson
Featured Audio:
Son Dambi - "Michosso
"What’s it like being a foreigner in Korea?"
DJ Raff - "Latino and Proud"
"Education gap: the root of inequality"
"30 million word gap"
President Barack Obama "#Close The Word Gap"