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Title: Asian Englishes in the Outer and Expanding Circles


1
World EnglishesUnit 6 (AF)
  • Asian Englishes in the Outer and Expanding Circles

2
English in the Indian SubcontinentOrigins
and History
  • The British first arrived in India in the early
    1600s and soon established trading posts in a
    number of cities under the control of The East
    India Company.
  • By 1765 the Companys influence had grown to such
    an extent that the British were effectively
    controlling most parts of the country.
  • This date is often taken as the start of what is
    referred to as The Raj a period of British rule
    in India that lasted until Independence in 1947.

3
English in the Indian SubcontinentOrigins and
History
  • A large number of Christian schools imparting an
    English education were set up by the early
    1800's.
  • The earliest English language policy for India
    was enshrined in Macaulays famous Minute (2
    Feb.1835)
  • We must at present do our best to form a class
    who may be interpreters between us and the
    millions whom we govern,  --a class of persons
    Indian in blood and colour, but English in
    tastes, in opinions, in morals and in intellect.
    To that class we may leave it to refine the
    vernacular dialects of the country, to enrich
    those dialects with terms of science borrowed
    from the Western nomenclature, and to render them
    by degrees fit vehicles for conveying knowledge
    to the great mass of the population.

4
Macaulays Attitude toward Indian Languages and
Educational Policy
  • I have no knowledge of either Sanscrit or
    Arabic. But I have done what I could to form a
    correct estimate of their value. I have read
    translations of the most celebrated Arabic and
    Sanscrit works. I have conversed, both here and
    at home, with men distinguished by their
    proficiency in the Eastern tongues. I am quite
    ready to take the oriental learning at the
    valuation of the orientalists themselves. I have
    never found one among them who could deny that a
    single shelf of a good European library was worth
    the whole native literature of India and Arabia.
    The intrinsic superiority of the Western
    literature is indeed fully admitted by those
    members of the committee who support the oriental
    plan of education.

5
English in 20th Century India
  • English had become the official and academic
    language of India by the early twentieth century.
    English was increasingly accepted as the language
    of government, of the social elite, and of the
    national press.
  • In 1947 India became an independent nation state.
    English was supposed to be gradually replaced by
    Hindi as the language of administration. But, in
    a country with hundreds of languages, it was
    difficult to choose a single national language,
    as mother tongue speakers of that language would
    automatically enjoy greater social status and
    have easier access to positions of power and
    influence. So, although English was not an
    indigenous language, it became an Associate
    Language, alongside Hindi, the Official
    Language of the Union of India and eighteen
    'National Languages', such as Bengali, Gujurati
    and Urdu, that have a special status in certain
    individual states.

6
English in India today
  • Despite continued pressure from nationalists,
    English remains at the heart of Indian society.
    It is widely used in the media, in Higher
    Education and government and therefore remains a
    common means of communication, both among the
    ruling classes, and between speakers of mutually
    unintelligible languages.
  • Role of English as a neutral language of wider
    communication.
  • Despite being a three percent minority, the
    English speaking population in India is quite
    large that three percent puts India among the
    top four countries in the world with the highest
    number of English speakers.

7
Indian English
  • It is a linguistic variety with its own
    grammatical, lexical, phonological and discoursal
    norms.
  • It has developed its own varietal characteristics
    through the interaction of Indian languages and
    social behaviours with those of English.
  • The Indianisation of English involves
    adaptations of existing features of British
    English and the use of transferred mother-tongue
    items where British English is deficient.

8
Indian English Phonology
  • VW merger many speakers do not differentiate
    between the sounds ltvgt and ltwgt.
  • TH-stopping they sometimes replace ltthgt in words
    like think and this with a lttgt and ltdgt sound, as
    no Indian languages contain these consonants.
  • Rhoticity the ltrgt sound is pronounced after a
    vowel in words like hard, corn and nurse .
  • Unaspirated ltpgt there is no release of air when
    ltpgt precedes a vowel in words like pin and pot

9
Indian English Grammar
  • Under the influence of traditional Hindi grammar,
    speakers often use progressive tenses in
    statements, such as I am believing you or she is
    liking music.
  • Zero article the indefinite article, a or an, or
    the definite article, the, are often omitted.
  • Zero past tense marker verbs are left unmarked
    for tense, although other signals (adverbs of
    time, such as yesterday, last week etc.) often
    give linguistic clues about the timing of an
    event.
  • Declarative word order in interrogative
    construction normal subject verb word order
    is retained in statements using the question
    words who, what, when, where, why, how etc. .
  • Plural uncount nouns litters, luggages,
    furnitures, woods .

10
Indian English Lexis
  • Code-switching the occasional or even frequent
    use of a Hindi (or Urdu, Punjabi, Gujurati etc.)
    word or expression within an English sentence can
    communicate a great sense of shared identity or
    solidarity with other speakers.
  • Extensive compound formation English-speaking
    classes, cousin-brother / cousin-sister,
    chalk-piece, key-bunch, meeting notice, age
    barred, pindrop silence, time-pass.
  • Shortening of words enthu for
    enthusiastic/enthusiasm or fundas for
    fundamentals
  • Acronyms MCP Male Chauvinist Pig - FOC Free
    Of ChargeMPK Maine Pyar Kiya (a popular
    movie)ILU I Love You (from a song pronounced
    ee-lu)ABCD American Born Confused Deshi
    (native of India)FOB Fresh Off the Boat

11
Indian English Usage
  • Whats your good name?
  • Dear sir, with reference to your above see my
    below - popular opening line in official
    letters.
  • Pritam Singh has left for his heavenly above -
    a death notice.
  • Hue and Cry notice - title of police missing
    person newspaper advertisement.
  • She freaked out last night - she had a good
    time.
  • Kindly please advise me.
  • Thank youji, Doctor Sahib.
  • Namaste, how are you?
  • "Will you take tea?
  • To give a test

12
English in China History
  • 1637 first contact between English speakers and
    Chinese when British expeditionary mission
    arrives in Macau and Canton.
  • A century later, Chinese Pidgin English
    develops as a lingua franca between natives and
    foreigners on the coast of South China.
  • Growth and diffusion of CPE enhanced by its
    extensive usability.
  • 1862 Treaty of Tientsin opens many other places
    to Western interests. Western missionaries
    establish schools, where either English is
    formally taught or adopted as a medium of
    instruction.
  • 1949 establishment of the Peoples Republic of
    China. English disappears from the school
    curriculum and Russian becomes the main foreign
    language.
  • After the collapse of the Cultural Revolution
    (196676), English recovers its importance and
    popularity as the country shifts to modernization
    and economic development.

13
English in China today
  • A primary school English textbook adopted in
    Tientsin starts with this preface English is
    usually used at international settings, and it is
    also a tool to grasp advanced scientific and
    technological information. In accordance with our
    countrys reform and open-door policies, it is
    essential that we learn English properly.
  • English is recognized as an indispensable
    language for international exchange and
    better-paid employment.
  • English is a very important subject at all levels
    of formal education. TV and radio stations
    popularize ELT programs across the country.
  • The national College English Test (CET) promotes
    English language learning at the tertiary level.
    The certificate of CET Band 4/6 has attained such
    a high social value that a majority of
    universities adopt the policy of no CET 4/ 6
    certificate, no graduation diploma, with the
    result that 6 million students take the tests
    annually.
  • English-language training in China is an industry
    worth around 15 billion yuan a year, or about
    1.3bn, and there are more than 50,000
    English-training organisations in China.

14
China EnglishA definition
  • English language specialists in China tend to
    refer to local features of English as China
    English instead of Chinese English since they
    claim that the latter characterization sounds
    derogatory to them, associated with Chinese
    Pidgin English or Chinglish.
  • China English is an educated variety of English
    that Chinese speakers of the language are
    expected to employ at international encounters,
    expressing their own cultural norms, behavioral
    patterns, and value systems. Jiang, 2002

15
China English Phonology (Deterding et al., 2006)
  • s instead of th sounds
  • avoidance of weak forms for function words
  • stressing of final pronouns
  • no voiced fricatives
  • many multisyllabic words pronounced with
    syllable-timing
  • insertion of final schwa

16
China English Syntax Pragmatics
  • Topicalization of adjuncts adverbials or
    adverbial clauses placed in front of main verb of
    a sentence.
  • Null subject parameter.
  • English texts are often organised in a deductive
    manner (main topic at beginning, supporting
    material postponed). China English texts share
    the Chinese inductive discourse structure (most
    significantpoints are delayed until sufficient
    background info is given).

17
China EnglishIntercultural communication
  • Several years ago, when Hong Kong was still
    a colony of Britain, I was sitting in the office
    of a superintendent of the Hong Kong Police
    Force. The superintendent was English. In those
    colonial days, almost all the police officers
    were expatriates and the sergeants and constables
    were all locals. I was there because I worked for
    a company who had been asked to explain the
    communication problems that were common in the
    police force at that time. There was a quiet
    knock at the door and in came a young Chinese
    police constable . . . (Honna, Kirkpatrick, and
    Gilbert, 20011617)

18
China EnglishIntercultural communication
  • Yes?, enquired the superintendent.
  • My mother is not very well, sir, started the
    constable.
  • Yes?, repeated the superintendent, a frown
    appearing on his brow.
  • She has to go into hospital, sir, continued the
    constable.
  • So?
  • On Thursday, sir.
  • The superintendents frown was replaced by a look
    of exasperation. What is it that you want?, he
    asked sternly
  • At this direct question, the constables face
    fell and he simply mumbled, Nothing,
  • sir. Its all right, and turned and left the
    room.
  • As soon as the door had closed the superintendent
    turned to me and said
  • You see. A classic case. They cant get to the
    point.
  • So, what would you want him to say?, I asked.
  • Well, instead of beating around the bush, he
    should come straight to the
  • point. He obviously wants some leave so he can
    look after his mother. He should
  • ask for leave and not waste my time going on
    about his poor mother.
  • You want him to say something like, Can I have
    some leave please, sir?
  • Yes, exactly, replied the superintendent

19
China English Lexis
  • China Daily, Shanghai Daily, or the Beijing Today
    weekly are full of expressions coined to refer to
    Chinese ways and experiences of life, such as
  • barefoot doctor, peoples commune, great
    leap forward, paper tiger, ideological
    remodeling, reform through physical labor,
    red guard, red rice, one country, two
    systems, the higher authorities have policies
    and the localities have their countermeasures,
    planned commodity economy, enterprise
    contracted production system, safety first and
    prevention first, outstanding deeds and
    advanced persons, one-family-one-child policy,
    family contracted responsibility system.

20
English in Japan
  • The English language was first introduced into
    Japan in March, 1600. It was when William Adams,
    the English pilot of a Dutch ship, reached the
    western part of the country after a shipwreck.
    Later renamed as Miura Anjin in the Japanese
    fashion, he soon acquired Shogun Tokugawa
    Ieyasus personal trust and worked as an
    intermediary between the Japanese ruler and Great
    Britains King James I, delivering translated
    messages back and forth across the seas.
  • At the time of Meiji Restoration (1868), Japans
    new enlightened leaders came to realize that
    English would be essential for the countrys
    modernization and development. The Government
    soon established a national educational system in
    1872 and introduced English language teaching in
    five-year secondary schools, often even in
    six-year primary schools, in major cities.

21
English in Japan
  • English language teaching was reinvigorated as
    peace was restored after the end of World War II
    in 1945. Two years later, the government set up
    six-year primary school and three-year junior
    high school education as compulsory, with English
    introduced nationally as a subject from the first
    year of the secondary curriculum to continue into
    the three-year senior high school and then to
    college.
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