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The Adverse Side-Effects of English's Dominance

 
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jpvanderwerf2001



Joined: 02 Oct 2003
Posts: 1117
Location: New York

PostPosted: Mon Feb 16, 2009 5:54 am    Post subject: The Adverse Side-Effects of English's Dominance Reply with quote

I thought this was an interesting view of the dominance of English in Europe by Charlemagne in this weeks' Economist.
This should be good for us EFLers...right?:

English is coming
Feb 12th 2009
From The Economist print edition


The adverse side-effects of the growing dominance of English

LAST summer, on the Atlantic coast of France, Charlemagne was introduced to a fine beach game: building big sand-walls near the shoreline in the face of a rising tide. It is a more thought-provoking activity than building sandcastles, with a nice melancholic tinge. The walls last a surprisingly long time, resisting the lapping tide with the help of energetic patching and fresh buckets of dry sand. But when they fail, they fail quickly. It takes just two or three big waves to signal doom: once water flows behind the defences, even the thickest ramparts are swift to collapse.

European efforts to resist the rise of the English language have now reached the same point. The latest Anglo-surge comes from the European press, with a dramatic increase in the number of heavyweight publications launching English-language websites, offering translated news stories and opinion pieces.

English-language publications aimed at expatriates and tourists have been common for years. But the new development involves big, established national journals, whose bosses want to be more visible in English. Der Spiegel, a German newsweekly, has founded a pan-European �network� linking up such websites. A Dutch daily, NRC Handelsblad, joined a few months ago, followed by Politiken from Denmark. The trio are in talks with newspapers in France and Spain. They are eager to expand into eastern Europe, though the credit crunch is likely to slow progress (an online English edition can cost half a million euros a year in translation fees). Beyond this network, a non-exhaustive trawl finds English-language websites of big newspapers in Germany, Italy, Finland, Greece, Spain, Romania, Poland, Bulgaria and Turkey. Many are recent ventures.

Editors� motives are a mix of idealism and commercial ambition. Bosses at Spiegel have a political dream to create a platform where �Europeans can read what other Europeans think about the world,� says Daryl Lindsey, who runs the magazine�s international edition. But an English presence is also a �calling card� when pitching to international advertisers. It has proved helpful to journalists seeking interviews with world leaders. Kees Versteegh of NRC Handelsblad talks of creating a European �demos�, but also admits to frustration at publishing some �very fine pieces� in Dutch that the rest of the world never notices.

The evidence points to the imminent collapse of the European Union�s official language policy, known as �mother tongue plus two�, in which citizens are encouraged to learn two foreign languages as well as their own (ie, please learn something besides English). Among Europeans born before the second world war, English, French and German are almost equally common. But according to a Eurobarometer survey, 15-to-24-year-olds are five times more likely to speak English as a foreign language than either German or French. Add native speakers to those who have learnt it, and some 60% of young Europeans speak English �well or very well�.

This is a clear win for English. But paradoxically, it does not amount to a win for Europe�s native English-speakers. There are several reasons for this. Start with a political one. European politicians long feared that the use of English in the EU would lead to the dominance of Anglo-Saxon thinking. They were wrong. The example of newspapers is instructive: thanks to English (and the internet), a genuinely pan-European space for political debate is being created. It has never been easier for other Europeans to know what Poles think about the credit crunch, Germans about the Middle East or Danes about nuclear power. English is merely �an instrument�, says Mr Versteegh of NRC Handelsblad, not �a surrender to a dominant culture.�

There is a second reason why Anglophones are not about to dominate European debate: they do not want to. British readers have access to an unprecedented range of news and ideas from Europe in their mother tongue. They show little interest. Only 5% of Spiegel International�s readers are from Britain (though half are from North America). In recent years, British newspapers have withdrawn staff reporters right across Europe, and not only to save money. Britain�s daily newspapers are less and less interested in European politics and policy. Light, sensational stuff is what editors choose for publication, plus tales of British tourists and expatriates in trouble (a genre known as �Brits in the shit�).

Why bother?
Such parochialism may be linked to a fall in language-learning, accelerated since 2003, when foreign languages became voluntary in England and Wales for pupils over 14. That robs them of such benefits as the humility and respect for others that come from learning another language. But given the rise of English, it is rational, says Philippe van Parijs, a Belgian academic.

Under his �maxi-min rule�, Mr van Parijs observes that speakers at EU meetings automatically choose the language that excludes the fewest people in the room. They do not use the language best known, on average, by those present (which in some meetings will still be French). Instead, they seek the language that is understood, at least minimally, by all. Thanks to EU enlargement to the east (and poor language skills among British and Irish visitors to Brussels), this is almost always English. That means Britons find it ever harder to justify learning other languages. Even when they do, they have to speak other languages extremely well to avoid inflicting halting French, say, on rooms of fluent English-speakers. And it carries other costs. In Brussels, native English-speakers are notoriously hard for colleagues to understand: they talk too fast, or use obscure idioms.

Mr van Parijs has a prediction: Europeans will become bilingual, except for Anglophones, who are becoming monolingual. In other words, just when the British should be happy, some nasty storm clouds are gathering. You could say it sounds rather like a day at the British seaside.

(The link: http://www.economist.com/world/europe/displayStory.cfm?story_id=13103967)
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thelmadatter



Joined: 31 Mar 2003
Posts: 1212
Location: in el Distrito Federal x fin!

PostPosted: Mon Feb 16, 2009 9:32 pm    Post subject: international English Reply with quote

I dont see the adverse side effects here. English is becoming the lingua franca, instead of Europeans learning three or more languages in hopes that they find someone in the room they can talk to.

As the articles states, dominance of English is not translating into dominance of Anglo culture, it is simply a tool to be assured that you can communicate across the continent.

Might this mean the end of a polyglot Europe... if and only if English begins be be spoken as a mother tongue by some future generation and even then, it wont be British English but rather a new variety with its own accent and vocabulary twists.

I dont see a downside to this unless you think the scene from the I Love Lucy episode "Paris at Last" is the way things should be done (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OACIfwkg7ns)
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Marcoregano



Joined: 19 May 2003
Posts: 872
Location: Hong Kong

PostPosted: Tue Feb 17, 2009 1:37 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

A good article IMO, though I don't quite agree with the assertion that Anglophones are "becoming monolingual" - most already are! That is the negative side to the story - but most of the rest is good news for TEFLers.
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jonniboy



Joined: 18 Jun 2006
Posts: 751
Location: Panama City, Panama

PostPosted: Tue Feb 17, 2009 6:15 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Some places though are clearly advancing faster than others in their English knowledge. English teaching has only been widespread in schools in the Baltic states since the early 1990s (German seems to have been the preferred foreign language up until that point) yet most young Balts that I've met have an excellent level of English. So much so that I firmly believe that in 20 years time this region will be like Scandinavia in terms of the scarcity of teaching positions due to near universal English knowledge. In Spain and Italy in contrast, English has been available to all for much longer but the standards are still really poor and show no sign of improvement and many of the students don't seem too bothered either.
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SueH



Joined: 01 Feb 2003
Posts: 1022
Location: Northern Italy

PostPosted: Tue Feb 17, 2009 9:47 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

jonniboy wrote:
In [Spain and] Italy in contrast, English has been available to all for much longer but the standards are still really poor and show no sign of improvement and many of the students don't seem too bothered either.


I'd agree with you there! Any English teacher will know the syndrome when somebody comes along in a panic needing English for some exam or job, and expects to be able to learn enough in a short intensive course. A local teacher had a classic where his student told his new boss at interview that he spoke both English and German: cue an even bigger panic than normal!

The prof. is right about difficulties in justifying language learning. Which language and how do we improve when the _opportunities_ for using that language are so much less. Most of us who live abroad prove that we aren't inherently bad language learners.
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J.M.A.



Joined: 20 Jan 2009
Posts: 69

PostPosted: Tue Feb 17, 2009 10:20 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hmm if you are interested in this theme and/or a scathing critique of the TEFL industry and English dominance in (and resisting it) then you might enjoy Phillipson or Canajarah (sp.?), both published by Oxford Press.

Phillipson really takes a well deserved hatchet to David Crystal in another volume called Controversies in Applied Linguistics (I think), also published by Oxford Press. It's actually quite a fun read!
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Justin Trullinger



Joined: 28 Jan 2005
Posts: 3110
Location: Seoul, South Korea and Myanmar for a bit

PostPosted: Tue Feb 17, 2009 11:04 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'll second that, though not everyone finds applied linguistics to be a fun read!

David Graddol's piece, English Next, is a fairly interesting look at some of the same ideas- sponsored by the BC, and available on their website.

Best,
Justin
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J.M.A.



Joined: 20 Jan 2009
Posts: 69

PostPosted: Wed Feb 18, 2009 12:53 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Graddol is good. Jennifer Jenkins' resource book "World Englishes" published by Routledge also deals with the development and status of *surprise* World Englishes (an article by Graddol is included IIRC). This topic is quite interesting IMO and well worth reading about in the literature in order to refine one's perspective.
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