Emergent lingua francas and world orders : the politics and place of English as a world language

Bibliographic Information

Emergent lingua francas and world orders : the politics and place of English as a world language

Phyllis Ghim-Lian Chew

(Routledge studies in sociolinguistics, 1)

Routledge, 2009

  • : hbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [249]-276) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book presents an alternative paradigm in understanding and appreciating World Englishes (WEs) in the wake of globalization and its accompanying shifting priorities in many dimensions of modern life, including the emergence of the English language as the dominant lingua franca (ELF). Chew argues that history is a theatre for the realization of lingua francas, offering a model that shows the present as derived from the past and as a bearer of future possibility, the understanding of which is rooted in the understanding of World Englishes and ELF. The book will engage with some of the current theoretical debates in WEs and includes, as a means of fleshing out the model, sociolinguistic case studies of Arabia, China Fujian, and Singapore.

Table of Contents

List of Figures Preface Acknowledgments 1: Emergent Lingua Francas and World Orders 2: A Model of Evolving World Orders and Lingua Francas 3: Liminality 4: The Last Liminal Period: Emergent Arabic in the Middle Ages 5: Three Phases of Liminality 6: Embracing Liminality: A Case Study of Singapore 7: A Case Study of The Peoples' Republic of China 8: A Case Study of Southern Min Language 9: The Place of English in the World Today Notes Bibliography Index

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