Capital, Commodity, and English Language Teaching

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Capital, Commodity, and English Language Teaching illustrates how the drive for profit in commercial ELT affects the manner in which language is taught. The book looks at education as a form of production, and asks how lessons are produced, and how the production of profit in addition to the production of the lesson affects the operation of educational institutions and their stakeholders.

Simpson delivers a theoretically rigorous conception of capital and builds from this an investigation into how the circulation of capital for profit interrelates with the teaching of language. Simpson discusses ELT at both a global level, in discussion of the ELT industry in the UK, the US, Ireland, Canada, Japan, Spain, and transnationally online, as well as at a more local level, where finer detailed descriptions of the work-lives of those within the Japanese eikaiwa ELT industry are given. Drawing on a synthesis of Marxist and Bourdieusian theory, the book outlines a dialectical approach to understanding capital, and to understanding how the drive for profit and language education interrelate with one another. Simpson concludes by showing how such an approach might open up areas for further research in a number of contexts across the globe, as well as in light of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Providing a model for addressing global issues of ELT, this book is of interest to advanced students, scholars and professionals within applied linguistics, TESOL, sociolinguistics, and linguistic anthropology, language economics and related areas.

Author(s): William Simpson
Series: Language, Society and Political Economy
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 232
City: London

Cover
Half Title
Series Information
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
1 Working in Commercial ELT
1.1 Working in Commercial ELT: An Autobiographical Account
1.2 The Global ELT Industry
1.3 The Commercial ELT Industry in Applied Linguistics
1.4 Aims of the Book
1.5 Outline of the Book
Note
References
2 Commodity and Capital
2.1 Political Economy and Language
2.2 The Commodification of Language: Literal and Metaphorical
2.3 Commodification All the Way Down?
2.4 From the Commodity to Capital – The Production of Capital
2.5 Class: The Labour . Capital Social Relation Within the Production of Capital
2.6 Defining Capital
2.7 Capital: Bourdieu and Marx
2.8 Identifying the Commodity
2.9 Disruptions in the Flow of Capital
Notes
References
3 A Dialectical Approach to Contradiction in Language Work
3.1 Thinking Dialectically: Contradictory Identities
3.2 Dialectical Relations
3.3 Dialectical Contradictions
3.4 A Dialectical View of Language Work in the New Economy
3.5 The Relations of Production
3.6 Commodification and Freedom
3.7 The Alienation of Labour
3.8 Use-Value and Exchange-Value in Linguistic Commodification
3.9 Summary: A Dialectical Approach to Language Work
Notes
References
4 Dialectically Defining Eikaiwa
4.1 Defining Eikaiwa
4.2 Approaching Eikaiwa as a Contradictory Identity
4.3 Eikaiwa and the Formal/Non-Formal Unity
4.4 The Student–Teacher Relation
4.5 Native and Non-Native English-Speaking Teachers in Eikaiwa
4.6 Summary: A Dialectical View of Eikaiwa
Notes
References
5 Work in Commercial Eikaiwa
5.1 Eikaiwa in Neoliberal Japan
5.2 Work in Commercial Eikaiwa
5.3 Skills, Precarity, Casualisation, and Taylorism in Eikaiwa
5.4 Context: Three Large Corporate Eikaiwa: Berlitz, NOVA, and Gaba
5.5 The Scope of Eikaiwa as Context and Its Interrelations
Notes
References
6 Asking Questions of Value
6.1 A Political Economy of Language Teaching
6.2 Abduction and Triangulation of Data
6.3 A Focus On Contradiction in Interviews
6.4 Dialectical Analysis and Method of Presentation
6.5 Summary: Asking Questions of Value
Note
References
7 The Production of the Eikaiwa Lesson
7.1 Freelance and Corporate Eikaiwa Teaching: Two Vignettes
7.2 Vignette 1: Dominic . Freelance Eikaiwa Teaching
7.3 Vignette 2: Frank – Corporate Eikaiwa Teacher
7.4 Taylorised Lesson Production in Eikaiwa
7.5 Flexible Lesson Production: Meeting the Demands of Students as Customers
7.6 The Dialectical Unity of Production and Consumption: Lesson-Object and Student-Subject
7.7 Contradiction Between Taylorised and Flexible Forms of Lesson Production
7.8 Customer Satisfaction: Student Evaluations of Teachers
7.9 Struggles Over the Use-Value – Exchange-Value Relation in Production
7.10 Summary: Taylorised and Flexible Forms of Lesson Production
Notes
References
8 The Distribution of Value Within Eikaiwa
8.1 Disjuncture Between the Realisation and Production of the Lesson Commodity: The Non-Production and Non-Consumption of the Lesson-Commodity
8.2 The Teacher Market and the Distribution of Value Within Eikaiwa
8.3 Value in Production and Distribution: The ‘Crude’ Rate of Surplus Value Production
8.4 Summary: Contradictions and Struggles in the Flow of Value
Notes
References
9 ‘Good Money for Someone, Not Teachers’: Class and the Fetishisation of Capital
9.1 The Commodity Consciousness: Labour Living Out the Contradictions of the Commodity
9.2 Fetishism and the Labour-Capital Class Relation
9.3 Fetishism in Class Relations: The Social Horizon
9.4 The Construction of Class Relations in Eikaiwa: Working ‘For’ and Working ‘With’
9.5 Class Fetishism and Ethno-National Identity
9.6 Fetishising Capital Outside of Social Relations
Notes
References
10 Towards a Political Economy of ELT Globally, and Through the Covid-19 Pandemic
10.1 Language Teaching and Profit
10.2 The Valuation of Language Teachers
10.3 The Global ELT Industry: Implications for Research
10.4 Covid and Commercial ELT
10.5 Further Research: Universal Alienation and Language Teaching
Note
References
Appendix 1: Transcription Conventions
Index