Mireille McLaughlin
University of Ottawa
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mireille McLaughlin.
Archive | 2016
Monica Heller; Lindsay A. Bell; Michelle Daveluy; Mireille McLaughlin; Hubert Noël
1. Sustaining the Nation: The Making and Moving of Language and Nation 2. The Making of a Mobile Ethnoclass 3. Building Bridges to Current Mobility 4. Moving Along, Back and Forth 5. Sustaining What Nation? Language and Labour in Cultural Economies 6. Conclusion: Can the Nation be Sustained? Bibliography
Multilingua-journal of Cross-cultural and Interlanguage Communication | 2016
Kati Dlaske; Elisabeth Barakos; Kyoko Motobayashi; Mireille McLaughlin
Abstract In the introduction to the special issue “Languaging the worker: globalized governmentalities in/of language in peripheral spaces”, we take up the notion of governmentality as a means to interrogate the complex relationship between language, labor, power and subjectivity in peripheral multilingual spaces. Our aim here is to argue for the study of governmentality as a viable and growing approach in critical sociolinguistic research. As such, in this introduction, we first discuss key concepts germane to our interrogations, including the notions of governmentality, languaging, peripherality and language worker. We proceed to map out five ethnographically and discourse-analytically informed case studies. These examine diverse actors in different settings pertaining to the domain of work. Finally we chart how the case studies construe the issue of languaging the worker through a governmentality frame.
Multilingua-journal of Cross-cultural and Interlanguage Communication | 2016
Mireille McLaughlin
Abstract The “multilingual turn” brings questions of language ownership to the forefront of debates about linguistic minority governance. Acadian minority cultural producers construct language ownership using multiple languages and targeting multilingual publics, but use ideologies of monolingualism to situate Acadian authenticity in place and time. As globalization brings minority language governmentality onto global terrains, cultural workers manage the tension between multilingualism and ownership through affective registers. This paper contributes to theorizing language and governmentality by understanding affect as a discursively produced register that serves to legitimate the distribution of resources. I follow the role affect plays in constructing linguistic minority subjects as agents of globalization. I flip cultural entrepreneur’s understanding of themselves as liberal agents of linguistic change and show how they are constrained by the political salience of monolingualism. I draw on ethnographic fieldwork carried out in the field of linguistic minority cultural production in Acadie to track moments when questions of ownership appeared. I pay attention to the role affect played in navigating the tensions between the economic value of multilingualism for global markets and the remaining political salience of monolingualism for minorities. Affect served to reproduce the minority speaker as a particular type of subject, one “attached” to a community constructed as ideally monolingual, either in the past, present or future. I then map out global linguistic minority governmentality to show how knowledge production on language is embedded in the tensions experienced by linguistic minority cultural producers.
Archive | 2013
Mireille McLaughlin
Francophonies d'Amérique | 2009
Mireille McLaughlin; Mélanie Le Blanc
Cahiers franco-canadiens de l'Ouest | 2006
Sonya Malaborza; Mireille McLaughlin
Recherches sociographiques | 2014
Monica Heller; Lindsay Bell; Michelle Daveluy; Hubert Noël; Mireille McLaughlin
Langage et société | 2014
Mireille McLaughlin
Revue du Nouvel-Ontario | 2013
Mireille McLaughlin; Rachid Bagaoui; Isabelle LeBlanc
Francophonies d'Amérique | 2009
Monica Heller; Patricia Lamarre; Mireille McLaughlin