This book reports the results of an ethnographic study, focusing
primarily on the experiences of four teachers of the Chinese language in
Australian secondary schools. The author creates an audience for their
voices as they reflect on their own understandings of culture, language
teaching, and culture in language teaching through semi-structured
interviews, and compares these reflections with written stimulus
dialogues designed to elicit 'culture-in-language' reflections, as well
as curriculum and policy documents produced by the Australian
government. The book's findings indicate that teachers of the Chinese
language are diverse in their views on culture, language teaching, and
the ways in which culture can or should inform language teaching, and
the author argues that language teacher intercultural competence cannot
be assessed through a synthesis of the current English-only research
literature. This book will be of interest to teachers and teacher
trainers of Chinese as a foreign language, as well as students and
scholars of applied linguistics and language education more broadly.