ABSTRACT

This book studies the intersection of language and social privilege in education in India. Drawing on rich ethnographic detail and primary data, it introduces a conversation of privilege, specifically contemporary configurations of caste and socioeconomic class in India, to the fields of South Asian studies and sociolinguistic educational studies. The author examines how and why education at the pre-primary, secondary, and higher education levels in India remains largely segregated by socioeconomic class and caste through the lens of language. She advances fields of study of multilingual education, language ideologies, and complexities between language and identity to contribute to work on language and privilege in education by providing a novel and contemporary case from India. The book also critiques contemporary caste configurations in India that uphold urban middle-class Brahmins as the socially privileged purveyors of social and linguistic norms.

Mother Tongue Prestige parses out threads of motivation, perceptions of education, and aspirations tied to language use and learning that shape generations of students in an educational system preparing them for a globalized workforce and urban, multilingual livelihoods in India and abroad. It will be an indispensable resource for students and researchers of education, language, sociology, sociology of education, linguistics, sociolinguistics, and South Asian studies.

part I|82 pages

The Nouns

chapter Chapter 1|27 pages

Introduction

Linguistic Privilege and Education in Urban India

chapter Chapter 2|27 pages

Speaking Marathi Like a Punekar

Caste, Class, and Linguistic Capital in Pune

chapter Chapter 3|26 pages

Linguistic Identities in the Indian University

Language Ideologies and Student Identities

part II|90 pages

The Verbs

chapter Chapter 4|27 pages

Disciplining Language

Linguistic Socialization in Primary School Classrooms

chapter Chapter 5|21 pages

Translanguaging Classrooms

Hypothetical Reported Speech in Classroom Discourse

chapter Chapter 6|26 pages

Priming English

Learning English through Mother Tongues

chapter Chapter 7|14 pages

Conclusion