This book provides rare insights into motivation among extremely
successful learners of English and languages other than English (LOTEs)
through the analysis of a longitudinal study and the examination of the
factors involved in becoming multilingual in a non-multilingual
environment. Based on sixteen interview sessions, conducted over the
course of nine years while the learners progressed from high school to
the world of work, this book offers the story of how two learners
persist in English/LOTE learning. The study illuminates the long-term
processes through which the interviewees develop ideal English/LOTE
selves in an environment where multilingualism is not emphasized and
where both English and LOTEs can still be described as foreign
languages. Educators and researchers will learn from this study, which
stretches our understanding of motivation beyond the recent theorizing
of L2 motivation and contributes to the limited research in long-term
motivational trajectories and LOTE learning motivation, which is
particularly scarce in non-European contexts. The book will be of
interest not only to readers in Japan but also to those in other
contexts as it offers an example of successful learners who go beyond
the pragmatic and instrumentalist view of language learning to hold a
more holistic view, thus revealing the factors which can sustain
multiple language learning, even in foreign language contexts.