Ambivalent English : What We Talk About When We Think We Talk About Language
Saarinen, T., & Ennser-Kananen, J. (2020). Ambivalent English : What We Talk About When We Think We Talk About Language. Nordic Journal of English Studies, 19(3), 115-129. https://doi.org/10.35360/njes.581
Published in
Nordic Journal of English StudiesDate
2020Copyright
© Authors, 2020
The ambivalence of English manifests itself in the discourses that surround it. English may be a resource and consume resources; it empowers and oppresses. The dichotomous discussion around the usefulness or dangers of English as a “global” or “world” language erases problematizations of the layered societal implications of English in localised contexts. English needs to be analysed not (only) as a language but (also) as the ideologies and societal structures intertwined with it. We examine English in two higher education contexts. Our first case deals with the so-called Accent Reduction courses offered for international students in US universities. The second one analyses English as a language political catalyst in a nation state context. We conclude with a discussion of the nativist and nation-state-centred role of global English. We argue that to discuss English as a language oversimplifies the societal implications of the debate. When we think we talk about English, we are, in fact, talking about the various societal, political, economic, cultural and historical power dynamics that accompany it.
...
Publisher
Göteborg UniversityISSN Search the Publication Forum
1502-7694Keywords
Original source
https://njes-journal.com/articles/581/galley/510/download/Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/42494391
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
Language shaming practices on Youtube : ideologies of English in Vietnam
Nguyen, Hoa Dieu (2019)As English has gradually become the global language, users of this lingua franca find themselves constantly challenged and intimidated by a new wave of linguistic attack online known as “language shaming practices on ... -
"Kyl me ollaan enkulla pärjätty" : Understanding the importance of corporate language policies – the context of a local Finnish company with a strategy to become international by learning English
Nieminen, Jasu (2022)Englannin kielen käytto lingua francana eli yleisenä yhteisenä kielenä on lisääntynyt ympäri maailmaa. Englannin kielen taitoa pidetään työelämässä ja työpaikoilla merkittävänä taitona niin yksittäisten henkilöiden kuin ... -
Language Ideology and Japan’s English Education Reform : A Critical Discourse Analysis of the Reporting in The Japan Times
Loisa, Janne (2019)Japanin englanninopetusjärjestelmää on pyritty uudistamaan lukuisia kertoja 1980-luvulta lähtien. Englannin kielen taitotaso on Japanissa kuitenkin edelleen yksi Aasian alhaisimpia, ja vuonna 2013 Japanin hallitus ryhtyi ... -
What about Swedish? Internationalisation, Societal Responsibility and National Languages in Finnish Higher Education
Saarinen, Taina; Rontu, Heidi (Brill, 2022)The chapter discusses discourses of “language” indexing social tasks of universities. We are interested in how talk of “language” is used to index the political, economic, educational, cultural etc. nature of higher ... -
Whiteness as currency : Exploring racial ideologies in Pakistan's English language teaching sphere
Ali, Rukhsana; Salam-Salmaoui, Rauha (Elsevier, 2024)Addressing the problem of racial ideologies in Pakistan's English Language Teaching (ELT) sphere, this study examines the practices within the Society of Pakistani English Language Teachers (SPELT) and the Linguistic ...