<p>"...This book is a significant contribution to identity studies in the field, especially in the realm of non-Western scholars agentively finding ways to ourselves through our own perspectives."--<strong><em>Journal of Language, Identity & Education,</em> 2010, 9:1, 87-89</strong></p>
<p>“The core intellectual issue addressed in this book is how we should make effective critical use of the concept of identity in addressing issues of institutional life, professional and everyday language, and diversity of gender, sexuality, class, and ethnic culture.... Given the increasingly pervasive and often uncritical use of notions of identity construction on these subjects, it is of great importance to develop a critical dialogue on these issues in the way which this volume proposes.”—Jay Lemke, University of Michigan</p><p>“...a major contribution to the fields it addresses. This book is quite appropriate not only for such areas as language, culture and education, multilingualism and multiculturalism, sociolinguistics, discourse and critical discourse analysis, and language and gender... but also for courses that deal with various aspects of comparative and international education more broadly.”—Timothy Reagan, University of Connecticut</p>