List of Contributors
Foreword, Suresh Canagarajah (Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of Applied Linguistics, English, and Asian Studies, Penn State University, USA)
Introduction: TESOL and Sustainability, John Katunich (Dickinson College, USA) & Jason Goulah (DePaul University, USA)Part I. Foundations for Sustainability in TESOL: Cultural Perspectives, Products, and Practices
1. Earth Democracy as Empowerment for TESOL Students and Educators: Though the Crisis Speaks English, englishes Can Become a Commons Language of Sustainability, M. Garrett Delavan (California State University, San Marcos, USA)
2. Re-orienting Language as a Commons: Dispositions for English Language Teaching in the “Second Watershed”, John Katunich (Dickinson College, USA)
3. Post-Truth Pedagogy for TESOL: Our Collective Responsibility for the Two-Legged, the Four-Legged, the Flyers, the Swimmers, the Multi-Legged and the Stationary, Sandra Kouritzin (University of Manitoba, Canada)Part II. Climate Change and Place as TESOL Curriculum and Pedagogy
4. TESOL into the Anthropocene: Climate Migration as Curriculum and Pedagogy in ESL, Jason Goulah (DePaul University, USA)
5. A Place-Based Ecopedagogy for an English for Academic Purposes Program, Kevin Eyraud (Utah Valley University, USA)
6. Cross-Cultural Communication in Tourism Encounters and Implications for Sustainable TESOL, Bal Krishna Sharma (University of Idaho, USA)
7. Saving the World without (Eco)Justice? English-Language Voluntourism, Rural Education, and Root Metaphors of Success, Cori Jakubiak (Grinnell College, USA) & Alan Hastings (Central College, USA)
Coda: The Incommensurability of English Language Pedagog[uer]y and Sustainability: Spirits and Protein, Satoru Nakagawa (University of Manitoba, Canada)
Index