Different areas of intercultural learning are considered, including language education; student and teacher mobilities; Indigenous education; backpacker tourism; and religious learning. The book provides a worked example of how critical autoethnography can help shift thinking within any discipline, and reflects critically upon the multidimensional nature of migrant teacher and learner identities.
This book will be essential reading for upper-level students of qualitative research methods, and on international education courses, including language education.
Phiona Stanley is Associate Professor of Intercultural Communications (Tourism and Languages) at Edinburgh Napier University, Scotland. Previously, she was Senior Lecturer in Education at UNSW Sydney, Australia. Her research—which is qualitative and mostly auto/ethnographic— focuses on intercultural interactions in a range of settings, including education and backpacker/volunteer tourism.