
Overview
Background
I'm a linguistic anthropologist who studies how communicative events in Indonesia figure in the building and maintenance of social relationships and common knowledge among Indonesians. During my PhD and post-PhD early years my research often involved long periods of fieldwork in Indonesia. As research funding and sabbatical have become scarce, I have increasingly turned to publically available data, such as Indonesian films, newspapers, social media and so on. I have published extensively on my research, including Language, Migration, and Identity: Neighbourhood Talk in Indonesia (Cambridge University Press, 2010); Language and Superdiversity: Indonesians Knowledging at Home and Abroad (Oxford University Press, 2015), Global Leadership Talk: Constructing Good Governance in Indonesia (Oxford University Press, 2020); Reimagining Rapport (Oxford University Press, 2021); Rapport and the discursive co-construction of social relations in fieldwork settings (Mouton De Gruyter, 2019); and Contact Talk: The Discursive Organization of Contact and Boundaries (with Deborah Cole and Howard Manns, Routledge, 2020).
Availability
- Associate Professor Zane Goebel is:
- Available for supervision
Fields of research
Qualifications
- Doctor of Philosophy, Charles Darwin University
Research interests
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Linguistic anthropological inquiries into the idea and nature of development and nation-building practices in Indonesia
I work on how everyday language practice are shaped by and shape everyday cultural practices in Indonesia. I have worked on community development in Semarang, leadership and governance in Semarang, ethnic relations in Indonesia, decentralization in Indonesia, ethnographic interviewing, and I am currently collaborating with BINUS university on a project that seeks to understand everyday experiences of tidal flooding in Kendal on Java’s north coast.
Research impacts
My research has informed public discussions about matters impacting on the teaching of Indonesian and Australia-Indonesia relations. My contribution to language teaching was via a string of papers published between 2001 and 2004. These papers focused on the importance of drawing on empirical sociolinguistic work when designing language learning curriculum. The most widely-known and cited are papers in the Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, and one co-authored with Paul Black and published in Babel which is journal of the Australian Federation of Modern Language teachers. Evidence of uptake of this work, in the areas of classroom pedagogy, and new ways of thinking about language models in foreign language classroom can be found in articles, edited books and thesis by Deborah Cole, Deryn Mansell, Brian Meadows, Kathy Mills, Anne-Marie Morgan, Kristoff Schoeman, and Indrawati Zirfirdaus. From October 2018 until January 2020 I was president of the Indonesian language and culture association for Queensland (Balai Bahasa dan Budaya Indonesia – QLD), which was tasked with supporting and promoting the study of Indonesia and Indonesian in Queensland. My impact also includes my widely read discussion “Indonesia and Australia you’d better watch your language” about the importance of encouraging deep understanding of what causes misunderstanding between Australians and Indonesians. Over 6000 people read my 2015 article in The Conversation. I have also been interviewed on SBS television and radio (in 2015 and three times in 2012) about language and Australia-Indonesia relations, and about Indonesia Language Teaching in Australia
Works
Search Professor Zane Goebel’s works on UQ eSpace
2002
Journal Article
When do Indonesians speak Indonesian? Some evidence from inter-ethnic and foreigner–Indonesian interactions and its pedagogic implications
Goebel, Zane (2002). When do Indonesians speak Indonesian? Some evidence from inter-ethnic and foreigner–Indonesian interactions and its pedagogic implications. Journal of Mutilingual and Multicultural Development, 23 (6), 479-489. doi: 10.1080/01434630208666481
2002
Journal Article
Code choice in interethnic interactions in two urban neighborhoods of Central Java, Indonesia
Goebel, Zane (2002). Code choice in interethnic interactions in two urban neighborhoods of Central Java, Indonesia. International Journal of the Sociology of Language, 2002 (158), 69-87. doi: 10.1515/ijsl.2002.052
Supervision
Availability
- Associate Professor Zane Goebel is:
- Available for supervision
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Available projects
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Everyday experiences of tidal flooding in Kendal, Indonesia
I am currently seeking PhD students with the potential of gaining LPDP funding to collaborate on a project that seeks to understand everyday experiences of tidal flooding in Kendal on Java’s north coast.
Supervision history
Current supervision
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Doctor Philosophy
Voices of Resilience: Exploring Linguistic Practices and Cultural Adaptations in the Santri Community's Response to Tidal Flooding in Kendal, Indonesia
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor David Chapman
Completed supervision
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2023
Doctor Philosophy
Contemporary Valuing Practices: The case of Javanese on Indonesian Youth Radio
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor David Chapman
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2024
Doctor Philosophy
Mixed Japanese youth in Australia and Japan: Negotiating a mixed identity under discourses of multiculturalism
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor David Chapman
Media
Enquiries
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