Between the Lines of Linguistic Justice: Lumbee English and Value Meshing in the Writing Center

Morgan Linn Zacheus, Elise Dixon

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Through a collage of storied vignettes written by Morgan– a pansexual Lumbee tutor– and Elise – a white, bisexual writing center director– we discuss the implications of enacting linguistic justice through code meshing in the writing center. Specifically, this article discusses the racial, political and cultural complexities of enacting linguistic justice in the writing center and the lived experience of a Lumbee tutor code meshing and “value meshing” her way through writing center sessions. Using the term “value meshing,” we describe the emotional labor of contending with complex histories of race, culture, discrimination, institutional and internalized racism when code meshing as writing center professionals. From both the perspectives of administrator and tutor, we argue the term “value meshing” can serve as shorthand for the complex emotional burden of consistently negotiating our language, our identities, and our sometimes conflicting cultural values, especially in collaborative settings like the writing center. We call for writing center professionals to carefully attend to the emotional burden of tutors of color as they enact linguistic justice through code- and value-meshing.
Original languageAmerican English
JournalThe Peer Review
Volume8
Issue number1
StatePublished - 2024
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Linguistic justice
  • Lumbee English
  • antiracism
  • code-meshing
  • value-meshing
  • linguistic diversity
  • wellness
  • White Mainstream English

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