World Englishes - The Hong Kong Institute of Education
Transcription
World Englishes - The Hong Kong Institute of Education
Public Lecture Series 2016: LOGO The English You Didn’t Learn in School IV World Englishes Wang Lixun Dept of Linguistics and Modern Language Studies, HKIEd 9 April 2016 1 Today’s topics English as a global language ‘World Englishes’ The relationship between language and political and economic power Examples of regional and social varieties of English. Model of English in language classrooms Conclusion 2 English as a global language English often said to be a global language (lingua franca) Why? - historical reasons: colonization and emigration (the British Empire, America becoming super power) - economic reasons: international business and trade - intellectual reasons: 80% of information that can be retrieved electronically is in English - entertainment reasons: main language of pop music, films, video games, etc. (Crystal, 2003) Other global languages? 3 Varieties of English The three circles of English speaking countries (Kachru, 1985): Inner Circle: ENL Outer Circle: ESL Expanding Circle: EFL 4 Expanding circle Outer circle Inner circle e.g. USA, UK 320-380 M e.g. India, Singapore 300-500 M Kachru (1985) and Crystal (2003) e.g. China, Russia 500-1000 M 5 World Englishes People talk of World Englishes – English not British owned Listen and decide where the speakers come from. Give reasons. Speaker 1 arrived, primary, my, time, line, job, new, stupid Speaker 2 lifelong, Chinese, my, wife Is one of the variety better than the others? 6 BrE and AmE: Two peoples divided by a common language biscuit sweets ketchup lift crisps maths post code Don’t move! Petrol Sidelights Number plate Windscreen Boot Gear box Tyre cookie candy catsup elevator French fries math zip code Freeze! Gas(oline) Parking lights License plate Windshield Trunk Gear shift Tire 7 Standard BrE and General American (GA): Differences in grammar: BrE: the committee were unable to agree GA: the committee was unable to agree BrE: Have you ever been to Washington? GA: Did you ever go to Washington? BrE: touch wood GA: knock on wood 8 Song You say either and I say either You say neither and I say neither Either. either, neither, neither Let’s call the whole thing off. You like potato and I like potato, You like tomato and I like tomato Potato, potato, tomato, tomato Let’s call the whole thing off. …… http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V3KQ9cDcw2s 9 Power Language status reflects past or current political and economic power A language is just ‘a dialect with an army and a navy’ (Max Weinreich, 1945) Is Cantonese a dialect or a language? Why? How about ‘mutual intelligibility’? 10 Language and National Identity Languages were often standardised with the rise of the nation state in the 19th Century Political motives - not because of anything special about the language itself Sense of identity / unity for countries Therefore any ‘triumphalism’ about English / ‘evangelical’ or ‘ethnocentric approaches’ inappropriate. Terms like ‘Non-Native Speaker’ / ‘Chinglish’ are loaded / disparaging 11 Money, money, money… Language / education now a major commercial product / industry British Council promotes ‘British brand’ and seeks to position Britain ‘as a leading-edge provider of cultural and knowledge-based products’ (Graddol, 1998) What about 孔子學院? (500 in 130 countries) Any dangers in commercialisation? 12 Standard BrE Formerly ‘The Queen’s English’ or ‘Oxford English’ or even ‘BBC English’ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O0etfsnGgEU https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ynKdYOQmD68 http://hk.youtube.com/watch?v=mBRP-o6Q85s&feature=related Correctly called Received Pronunciation (RP) Idea of the educated speaker model However, no more than 3% of English speakers claim to be speaking RP. Rare to hear it in UK. The Queen speaks Upper Crust RP The BBC now reflects all regional variations 13 Big UK North - South divide Short ‘a’ v long ‘a’ in the word ‘castle’ Differences between vowel sounds in ‘bus’ In Scotland– strong ‘r’ sound in ‘world’ Kirk (Kirche) = church Loch (lake) has Germanic ‘ch’ sound e.g. Loch Ness Monster Regional/social varieties = valid systems of communication, equal at level of theory. All express meaning and have own conventions - not ‘wrong’ But Standard BrE has prestige 14 Regional varieties of BrE Innumerable varieties Newcastle – Geordie – Ee, hinnie? Liverpool – Scouse - skule, buke Birmingham – Brummie - Oi’ll give it foive Midlands – Hurry up, duck. Gerron bus! London – Cockney Better get a better bit of butter 15 Estuary English Essex and the Thames Estuary Fastest growing variety TV soap operas like East Enders Gotta lotta, gonna, kinda, sorta, wanna, cudja, wudja, duntja, gotcha wicked innit, yer actual English Jamie Oliver: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LszMqDSKIKQ 16 Asian Varieties of English Indian English https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OoF4i77kPak Bruneian English Malaysian English Filipino English Singaporean English http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VFHKnphZjQY Hong Kong English? http://hk.youtube.com/watch?v=iIijBLnIKDI 17 Model of English in classrooms The model of English that should be used in classrooms has long been a subject of debate. At present, ‘Standard’ model in HK – RP (LPATE) A standard that is almost impossible to achieve. Hong Kong English has its unique features, just like any other varieties of English. International intelligibility: the key criterion for an acceptable model. ‘Standard’ needs to be redefined (Prof. Cheung?) Context and learner needs should determine the variety to be taught. (Kirkpatrick, 2007) 18 Conclusion English is no longer British owned There is no one single ‘standard English’ English changes all the time, we should be tolerant towards varieties and variations Discrimination against certain varieties of English is not appropriate English learners should be exposed to different varieties of Englishes, instead of aiming at studying one particular variety Effective communication is the ultimate goal 19 Final remark Don’t be ashamed of your Enlgish accent, be proud of it! 20 LOGO Bibliography Bolton, K. (2002). Hong Kong English: Autonomy and Creativity. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press. Bolton, K. (2003). Chinese Englishes: A Sociolinguistic History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Crystal, D. (2003). English as a Global Language (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press Kachru, B. B. (1982). The Other Tongue: English across Cultures. Urbana: Univerity of Illinois Press. Kirkpatrick, A. (ed.) (2002). Englishes in Asia: communication, identity, power and education. Melbourne: Language Australia. Kirkpatrick, A. (2007). World Englishes: implications for international communication and English language teaching. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. McArthur, T. (2002). The Osford Guide to World English. Oxford: Oxford Unversity Press. Smith, L. E. (1981). English for cross-cultural communication. London: Macmillan. Journals: World Englishes Asian Englishes 22 The British Empire https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Empire#/media/File:The_British_Empire_Anachronous.png Back