ABSTRACT

This edited book comprises chapters integrated around a central theme on college-educated Japanese, Korean, and Chinese women’s orientation to English study. The collection is composed of two parts: (1) East Asian women’s motivation to study in the West and (2) East Asian women’s dream to use English as a career. The first part discusses their international migration as facilitated by factors characteristic of East Asian nations (e.g. middle-class women’s access to advanced education and yet unequal access to professional career) and other factors inherent in each nation (e.g. different social evaluations of women equipped with competitive overseas degrees and English proficiency). The second part sheds light on the dreams and realities of East Asian female adults who, having been avid English learners, aim for "dream jobs" (e.g. interpreters) or have few other career choices but to be re-trained as English specialists or even as Japanese language teachers working abroad. This collection is suitable for any scholar interested in the lives and voices of young educated women who strive to empower themselves with language skills in the seemingly promising neoliberal world that is, however, riddled with ideological contradictions.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

part I|57 pages

East Asian female students’ motivation to study in the West

part II|94 pages

East Asian women’s lives after their English study at college

chapter 4|15 pages

Female language learners and workers

Japan versus its East Asian neighbors

chapter 5|23 pages

Language as pure potential in Taiwan

Case studies of six professional trajectories

chapter 6|16 pages

Dreams and realities

Translating in South Korea

chapter 7|16 pages

“How I wish English would actually save us women!”

Anguish, ambivalence, and agency among bilingual career women in Japan

chapter 8|22 pages

Problems in the discourse of developing “Japanese who can play active roles around the world”

Focusing on the life histories of English learners who turned into Japanese teachers