Abstract
As eighth-grade students of English in a “periphery”
community school in India, we were assigned to discuss and to appreciate
a piece of prose, from our textbook, called “On not answering
the telephone”; it was a satirical piece demonizing telephones
because their existence and use flouted all tenets of British English
linguistic etiquette. None of us in that class had a phone in our homes,
and none of us had any desire to learn the alien etiquette. We were
interested only in learning the language to the extent that
it could help us realize our immediate and, perhaps, future
goals. This was our tacit response, and resistance, to English
linguistic imperialism: awareness of the pragmatic rewards of
English-language acquisition and use, but negation and denial
of the cultural hegemony of English. This dynamic of ideological
imposition and resistance (and appropriation) forms the core
of Canagarajah's book, Resisting linguistic imperialism
in English teaching.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Sociology and Political Science,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
2 articles.
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