Alastair Pennycook is Professor of Language in Education, in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Technology, Sydney, Australia. He is the author of The Cultural Politics of English as an International Language (Routledge, 2017).
Chapter 1 Introduction: Posthumanism and applied linguistics
Chapter 2 Posthumanism: Cyborgs and the Anthropocene
Chapter 3 Distributed language and cognition
Chapter 4 Language and the senses
Chapter 5 Discourse and reality
Chapter 6 Mutual misunderstanding
Chapter 7 What's the point? Sharks, dogs and humans
Chapter 8 Posthumanist linguistics: new horizons
Posthumanist Applied Linguistics offers us alternative ways of thinking about the human predicament, with major implications for research, education and politics. Exploring the advent of the Anthropocene, new forms of materialism, and the boundaries between humans, other animals and objects, eight chapters by one of the foremost applied linguistics open up profound questions to do with language and the world. This posthumanist applied linguistic perspective is essential reading for all researchers and students in the fields of Applied Linguistics and Sociolinguistics.