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Language & Intercultural Communication
Editor: Dr John Corbett (University of Glasgow)
Associate Editor: Robert Crawshaw (Lancaster University)
Reviews and Criticism Editor: Dr Fiona J. Doloughan (University of Surrey)
Editorial Board: Gavin Jack (University of Stirling)


Volume: 6  Number: 3-4  Page: 250–261  doi:10.2167/laic252.0

Authenticity, Culture and Language Learning
Malcolm N. MacDonald1, Richard Badger2 and Maria Dasli2
1School of Education and Lifelong Learning, University of Exeter, UK, 2Centre for Language Education Research, University of Leeds, UK and 3School of Education and Lifelong Learning, University of Exeter, UK

In philosophy, authenticity has been used with two meanings: one entails the notion of correspondence; the other entails the notion of genesis (Cooper, 1983: 15). As in certain branches of philosophy, language teaching has perhaps clung too long to the first of these notions of authenticity at the expense of the other. This paper reviews four key conceptualisations of authenticity which have emerged in the field of applied linguistics: text authenticity, authenticity of language competence, learner authenticity and classroom authenticity. If any of these types of authenticity is couched exclusively in terms of one usage or the other, it can lead to an impoverishment and objectification of the experience of language learning. Text authenticity can lead to a poverty of language; authenticity of competence can lead to a poverty of performance; learner authenticity can lead to a poverty of interpretation; classroom authenticity can lead to a poverty of communication. This paper proposes that a pedagogy of intercultural communication be informed by a more hybrid view of authenticity as a process of subjectification, derived from the Heideggerian concept of self-concern.

Keywords: authenticity, English language teaching (ELT), intercultural communication, self-concern

© 2006 M.N. MacDonald et al.

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