English Language as Hydra
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Edited by:
Vaughan Rapatahana
and Pauline Bunce
About this book
This book argues that the English language industry has become a swirling, beguiling monster, unashamedly intent on challenging local lingua-diversity and threatening individual identities. It brings together linguists, literary figures and teaching professionals in a wide-ranging exposé of this enormous Hydra in action on four continents.
Author / Editor information
Vaughan Rapatahana is from New Zealand and has taught in a number of international locations. He has been published extensively in a variety of genres and his PhD was in Existential Literary Criticism.
Bunce Pauline :Pauline Bunce is an Australian teacher who has worked in Brunei Darussalam, Hong Kong, Malaysia and Sri Lanka. Her doctoral research examined the reading challenges posed by an alphabetic script for Chinese learners of English in Hong Kong.
Vaughan Rapatahana was born in Patea, Aotearoa-New Zealand. He has a doctorate from the University of Auckland and he has worked as a teacher in the Republic of Nauru, Brunei Darussalam, the United Arab Emirates, China and Hong Kong. He has written widely in a variety of genres, and is the author of several books, collections of poems and poetry teaching resources.
Pauline Bunce is an Australian teacher who has worked in Sri Lanka, Brunei Darussalam, Malaysia and Hong Kong. Her doctoral research with Charles Darwin University in Australia and her regular feature articles in the South China Morning Post have had a major influence on English teaching practices in Hong Kong.
Reviews
The engaged and politically accountable scholarship exhibited in this volume offer both example and hope for creating a more equitable linguistic world order.
Jo Anne Burns, Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand:
Read it if you can: it is an important bookthat highlights some of the damaging effects of the global spread of English, a phenomenon in which our industry is complicit.
Genevieve Chow:
This book does offer a different perspective on the impact of learning English in non-English speaking countries. It gives readers another point of view as most might only look at the positive influence of English on the society in terms of the economic and social benefits, and overlook the negative impact it has on local cultures and indigenous languages. Hence, this book would be of interest not only to language policy makers but also English language teacher trainers and teachers who need to be aware of these important issues.
Corazon D. Villareal, University of the Philippines Diliman:
The book offers fresh and concrete evidence that the hydra stalks the postcolonial world pervasively and persistently.
Wong Jock Onn, National University of Singapore, Singapore:
This book is thus an important one, which all language planners, ministers of education, English educators and other related authorities should be encouraged to read.
Isabel Pefianco Martin, Ateneo de Manila University, Philippines:
In Greek mythology, the swamp-dwelling monster Hydra, is almost invincible, with its multiple heads that grow back after being cut off. Such is the power of the English language on the users it dominates. The English language as Hydra is the central image presented in this collection of case studies about how the language was used and manipulated in various parts of the world. As the case studies reveal, English linguistic imperialism does exist in various parts of the world. Still, the authors of the chapters are careful not to present the language per se as monster, but the agents and the attitudes that perpetuate its dominance at the expense of other languages. In addition, for most of the chapters, there are descriptions of various forms of resistanceto English as Hydra. Thus, while the book is a stern reminder to all who embrace English as decontextualizedand neutral, it is also recognition of human agency, as well as of critical and intelligent responses to English linguistic imperialism among stakeholders of the language.
Carol Benson, Stockholm University in Language Policy:
The chapter contributors, including literary heavyweights Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o and Muhammad Haji Salleh, make the figurative connections between the Hydra’s many indestructible heads and the highly destructive forces that English teaching exerts on non-dominant languages and cultures around the world.
Mark P. Williams:
English Language As Hydra is a useful reminder of the political dimensions of the cultural sphere and a fascinating crtique of the cognitive processes which accompany globalisation. This is an important book for anyone interested in the dynamics of education, culture and politics in a globalised world.
Andy Kirkpatrick, author of English as a Lingua Franca:
A wonderful and rewarding collection of contributions which critically examine how English can take over the language curriculum in schools throughout the world, almost always at the expense of other languages.
Rainer Enrique Hamel, author of Language Empires, Linguistic Imperialism and the Future of Global Languages:
English Language as Hydra opens our eyes to how empires and imperialism operate through linguistic ideologies and discourse strategies as powerful tools of domination - often with the active participation of the leaders of subaltern peoples and minorities.
Ruanni Tupas, author of (Re)making Society: The Politics of Language, Discourse, and Identity in the Philippines:
English Language as Hydra is both poignant and honest in its reasoned and passionate evocation of this language's entrenched link with some of the ills of the world and its impact on speakers' subjectivities.
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Contributors
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Acknowledgements
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Series Editor’s Note
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The Genesis of this Book
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Foreword
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Introduction: English Language as Thief
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1. The Challenge – Ndaraca ya Thiomi: Languages as Bridges
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2. English Language as Bully in the Republic of Nauru
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3. Out of Sight, Out of Mind… and Out of Line: Language Education in the Australian Indian Ocean Territory of the Cocos (Keeling) Islands
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4. English Language as Juggernaut – Aboriginal English and Indigenous Languages in Australia
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5. English Language as Nemesis for Ma¯ori
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6. A Personal Reflection: New Zealand Māori and English
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7. The Malchemy of English in Sri Lanka: Reinforcing Inequality through Imposing Extra-Linguistic Value
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8. English Language as Governess: Expatriate English Teaching Schemes in Hong Kong
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9. English Language as Auntie: Of ‘Good Intentions’ and a Pedagogy of Possibilities – ELT in the Philippines and its Effects on Children’s Literacy Development
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10. It’s Not Always English: ‘Duelling Aunties’ in Brunei Darussalam
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11. English Language as Siren Song: Hope and Hazard in Post-Apartheid South Africa
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12. English Language as Border-Crossing: Longing and Belonging in the South Korean Experience
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13. English and Mandarin in Singapore: Partners in Crime?
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14. English Language as Intruder: The Effects of English Language Education in Colombia and South America – a Critical Perspective
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Afterword: Could Heracles Have Gone About Things Differently?
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Coda: One Colonial Language: One Great Tragic Epic. 263 English in Malaysia and Beyond
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