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A world view Present-day world status of English  The expansion of British colonial power> past (end 19th)  US leading economic power 20th >present and.

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Presentation on theme: "A world view Present-day world status of English  The expansion of British colonial power> past (end 19th)  US leading economic power 20th >present and."— Presentation transcript:

1 A world view Present-day world status of English  The expansion of British colonial power> past (end 19th)  US leading economic power 20th >present and future >USA = 70% of all English mother-tongue speakers in the world

2 Kachru’s circles expanding circle outer circle inner circle

3  inner circle: traditional basis of English (L1)> U.S., Canada, Britain, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and several Caribbean countries  outer circle: English as a second language (L2) > India, Singapore, etc.  expanding circle: English used as an international language or taught as a foreign language (EFL) > China, Japan, Italy, etc.

4  “expanded” circle?  impressive number of speakers  a quarter of the world’s population speaks English  remarkably short period of time

5 List p. 62-65 > a few observations  Variety of sources  Indirect methods (percentage of people over 25 + secondary education)  ‘Variety of English’ includes pidgins and creoles (as opposed to varieties of French)  ‘official’ (p.67 Rwanda and Burundi)

6 List p. 62-65 > a few observations Totals:  329 million (conservative > L1)  400 million (includes pidgins and creoles)  430 million L2 (anyway ahead of L1 total!)  EFL > estimates vary enormously (command?) 1997 a billion people learning English (Br C) Ratio of native : non-native 1:3

7 Situation without precedent No other language has spread around the globe so extensively SPEED with which the expansion has taken place since the 1950s What happened in 60 years?

8 The cultural foundation  P. 72  Writers speculating about the future of English > always a dangerous activity!  ‘English is the language of the future’ > hundreds of quotations in 1800.  Not a single quotation to suggest a different view

9 The language’s social usefulness  Geo-historical survey > past  Socio-historical > to understand  Cultural account > can give us a sense of what is likely to happen in the future  ‘in the right place at the right time’ > Note 10 arguing against Phillipson (see bibliography on the website)

10 Civilizing influence of Britain (…?)  Unpalatable triumphalist attitude of quotations on p.78-9  English as a guarantor, as well as a symbol, of political unity.  English to communicate between speakers of indigenous communities  When unity feels threatened > language used as a symbol

11 Two sides of the coin Colonialism  Desire for national linguistic unit  Desire for international linguistic unit Language of colonial power introduces a medium of communication BUT it reflects the bonds between that colony and the home country > post-colonial literature


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