ABSTRACT
While time and context have been found to have both synergistic and cumulative effects on language learners’ cognitive and socio-affective development, time itself remains under-conceptualised in those processes. Drawing on the Bakhtinian construct of chronotope Bakhtin [(1981). The Dialogic Imagination: Four Essays. Translated by Caryl Emerson and Michael Holquist. Austin: University of Texas Press], and Blommaert’s [(2015). “Chronotopes, Scales, and Complexity in the Study of Language in Society.” Annual Review of Anthropology 44: 105–116. doi:10.1146/annurev-anthro-102214-014035] emphasis on its essential connection to historical and momentary agency, we analyse narrative accounts of three high school students learning English in rural Vietnam from a dialogical perspective. Specifically, we identify how different chronotopes are implied and expressed involving a range of settings, social actors, artefacts, actions and timescales as the students author themselves as English language learners. Importantly, we examine how these chronotopes function as frames in which time, settings, agency and emotion are entwined, assuming different significance and generating meanings which can merge, collide and conflict with other chronotopes. We reveal how chronotopes are implicated in the ways in which learners construct their agency at specific moments within particular settings, and argue that emotion is a central component in those processes. To conclude, we suggest that the construct of chronotope is a valuable tool for developing more complex, fine-grained understandings of how students construct meaning within and across multiple time-space configurations as they author their lifeworlds.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Notes on contributors
Cynthia White is Professor of Applied Linguistics, Massey University, New Zealand and has published widely on affect, agency and identity in online language learning and teaching, and in out-of-class settings for language learning. She is on the Editorial Boards of eight international journals, including TESOL Quarterly and is Associate Editor for Language Learning & Technology. She has been plenary speaker at international conferences and workshops in Germany, Thailand, Singapore, China, UK, Hawai'i and Malaysia and has completed collaborative research projects with Oxford University, Open University UK and Nottingham University. Her most recent project concerns agency and emotion in teacher narrative accounts of conflict in an L2 classroom.
Cuong Pham is an English language lecturer at the University of Economics and Law, Vietnam National University. He obtained his PhD in Applied Linguistics from Massey University, New Zealand. Pham has a wide range of teaching and research experience in both EAP and ESP contexts in New Zealand and Vietnam. His research interests include language learning motivation and emotion, learner agency, ecological systems theory, lifewide adaptive language learning, and language learning and teaching in rural settings.