World Englishes and Culture Wars
Written from a non-Western perspective, this book exposes the inadequacy of oppositions such as native versus non-native Englishes and English versus New Englishes. It explains why the label 'World Englishes' captures both what the different Englishes share and how they differ from each other. It also criticizes the kinds of power asymmetries that have evolved between the Inner, Outer, and Expanding Circles of English, while showing the extent to which the Outer Circle has enriched their common language and made it suitable for both its heritage and non-heritage users. The narrative is grounded in a wealth of historical knowledge, especially that of the colonization of the Outer Circle. Readers are invited to compare the spread and differentiation of English with those of Latin, which evolved into the Romance languages. This comparison may leave the reader asking: could English break up into Anglian languages?
- Explains how indigenized varieties of English have evolved
- Shows native speakers around the world why they do not need to all speak the same English
- Advocates tolerance for variations in the way English is used around the world
Reviews & endorsements
'A classic collection that enlarges and illuminates a range of key issues relating to culture, literary creativity, linguistic inquiry, multilingualism and the dynamics of Englishes worldwide … Essential reading for all those interested in the theoretical underpinnings of World Englishes as an academic discipline.' Kingsley Bolton, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
'This consolidated version of Braj B. Kachru's seminal and still relevant research on the postcolonial roles, forms and functions of English will continue to challenge and serve a new generation of students and researchers.' Rajend Mesthrie, University of Cape Town
Product details
January 2017Hardback
9780521825719
344 pages
236 × 159 × 23 mm
0.61kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Part I. World Englishes Today:
- 1. The agony and ecstasy
- 2. The second diaspora
- 3. Culture wars
- 4. Standards and codification
- 5. The power and politics
- Part II. Context and Creativity:
- 6. The speaking tree
- 7. Creativity and literary canons
- Part III. Past and Prejudice:
- 8. Liberation linguistics
- 9. Sacred linguistic cows
- 10. The paradigms of marginalization
- Part IV. Ethical Issues and the ELT Empire:
- 11. Applying linguistics
- 12. Leaking paradigms
- Part V. World Englishes and the Classroom:
- 13. Mythology in teaching
- Part VI. Research Areas and Resources:
- 14. Research resources.