Microsoft Word Identity in language learning


Revista InterteXto / ISSN: 1981-0601


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Identityinlanguagelearning-intertexto

Revista InterteXto / ISSN: 1981-0601 
v. 9, n. 1 (2016) 
could be seen as a language broker as a way to escape her traditional family structure
Katarina hoped to have access to a community of professionals since she had been a 
teacher in Poland; and Felicia wished to connect with the Peruvian community, which was 
easier for her to access since she was wealthy in Peru.
It is relevant to mention that although imagined communities do not exist, and may be 
very different from the daily life reality, they are not perceived as unreal by the learner and 
can have a strong impact on the learner’s actions and investments (NORTON, 2001). 
Such communities, as the author explains, exert a large impact on second language 
learning and on the learners’ investment in the language s/he is learning.
Finally, Kanno and Norton (2003) also argue that the existence of an imagined 
community presupposes the existence of an imagined identity, as well, and thus, it is 
essential to comprehend a learner’s identity not only in terms of his/her investment in the 
‘real’ world, but also in terms of his/her investment in possible worlds, that is, in his/her 
imagined community.
Norton’s main contributions with her work were to propose a new way to understand 
identity in SL acquisition, besides developing the concept of investment, instead of 
motivation, and the view that learners have imagined communities to which they aspire. It 
is important to highlight the fact that Norton’s (1997; 2000; 2001, among others) concepts 
of investment and imagined communities were developed based on a study she carried 
out in a SL context (as explained in the next section, there are some studies which applied 
Norton’s constructs to FL contexts as well).
The notion of identity as proposed by Norton (NORTON PEIRCE, 1997; NORTON, 
2000; 2001, among others) which combines the concepts of identity, along with language, 
investment and imagined communities, is more encompassing and thus provides a better 
understanding of the subtleties ingrained in the formation of the subject in the 
contemporary world.
5. 
Identity and language learning: empirical studies
As mentioned before, there is a growing body of research focusing on identity and 
language teaching and learning in the recent years, especially with studies which focus on 
teachers’ or student-teachers’ identities (HA, 2009; CLEMENTE & HIGGINS, 2008; 
MASTRELLA DE ANDRADE & NORTON, 2011; SILVA, 2013; GIL & OLIVEIRA, 2014; for 
example), and studies on students’ identities in SL contexts, in many cases with



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