赞比亚政治话语中的语言动态及其影响

Nsama Jonathan Simuziya
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Method of Enquiry/Design – Data were collected through an analysis of both latent and extant literature derived from a variety of scholarly sources on language dynamics and imperial notions associated with domineering languages. This approach of navigating through a juxtaposed pool of scholarly works provided a confluence of propositions that informed the study’s inferences, particularly by highlighting the subtleties embedded in the English language hegemony. Most significantly, the themes are also informed by this author’s own personal field anthropological observations; having been born and grown up in Zambia under this same hegemonic English language environment. Findings – The study finds that language regimes that put English above local languages (as is the case in Zambia) have enormous ramifications on the education and emancipatory objectives of locals, especially the marginalised groups. For instance, women are burdened in the sense that they must – in addition to the confronts associated with the imposition of the English language – also struggle to navigate the already challenging patriarchy terrains that are rooted in the Zambian cultural and political settings. Imposing additional inequalities makes the attainment of societal development goals a tall order to achieve. The study concludes that to redress this situation, the local educational curriculum needs to be re-designed and aligned to respond to the aspirations and context of local constellational demands. Also, Black consciousness as an ideology framed in liberation philosophy needs to be re-energised as a pathway towards a society free from systematic foreign oppression; this is the only way that sustainable development could be attained in Zambia. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的--世界上的问题越来越多,需要有人愿意贡献解决方案。本研究的核心是评估赞比亚人口的社会、政治和经济生活中的语言动态以及英语霸权对当地语言的影响。本研究收集了英语霸权的影响及其随之而来的殖民色彩和影响,尤其是对边缘化群体的影响。值得注意的是,本研究提供了一种批判性和反思性的发展研究分析,摒弃了常规:这种方法--倾向于土著和地方群体的发展利益--能够重新思考谁真正从语言政策和政治中获益,从而重新定位语言发展范式的真正对象。调查方法/设计--通过分析各种学术资料中关于语言动态和与霸权语言相关的帝国观念的潜在和现存文献来收集数据。这种通过并列的学术著作库进行导航的方法,为研究的推论提供了各种命题,特别是通过强调英语霸权中蕴含的微妙之处。最重要的是,这些主题还参考了作者个人的实地人类学观察;作者出生在赞比亚,并在同样的英语霸权环境下长大。研究结果--研究发现,将英语置于当地语言之上的语言制度(赞比亚的情况就是如此)对当地人,尤其是边缘化群体的教育和解放目标产生了巨大影响。例如,妇女的负担很重,因为她们除了要面对强加给她们的英语之外,还必须在根植于赞比亚文化和政治环境中、已经充满挑战的父权制领域中艰难前行。额外的不平等使得社会发展目标的实现变得困难重重。研究得出的结论是,为了纠正这种情况,需要重新设计和调整当地的教育课程,以满足当地人的愿望和需求。此外,黑人意识作为一种以解放哲学为框架的意识形态,需要重新注入活力,作为实现社会摆脱系统性外来压迫的途径;这是赞比亚实现可持续发展的唯一途径。原创性/价值--本研究揭露了赞比亚人自愿学习英语的普遍谬论,尤其是西方机构的谬论:恰恰相反,选择和学习英语往往是被迫的结果。在当代赞比亚,英语在更大程度上是达到目的的一种手段;是在现代环境中生存的一种手段,这种环境将英语置于任何地方语言或地方技能之上。在赞比亚,技能或智力的标准只能通过英语能力的棱镜来看待。当地的举措和技能被视为原始、落后和多余,因而受到鄙视。英语和 "白人 "被视为 "衡量好坏的标准"。事实上,许多白领都以在公共场合说当地语言为耻。因此,在这种情况下,英语在赞比亚并不是奢侈品,而是一种方便的必需品,使当地人能够在当代生活的其他重要途径上游刃有余。这项研究还揭示了这样一个事实,即英语霸权带来了种族身份扭曲的因素,特别是在人们如何获得其文化权利方面。此外,英语远非一种中立的语言--事实上,它有助于巩固新帝国主义的倾向,如歧视、排斥、微妙地促进经济不平等和教育精英主义。
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Language Dynamics and their Influence in Zambia’s Political Discourse
Purpose – A world with an increasing number of questions needs people willing to contribute solutions. The fulcrum of this study is centred on assessing the language dynamics and impact of the English language hegemony over local languages in the social, political, and economic life of the Zambian population. The study gleans on the implications of English hegemony and its concomitant colonial undertones and effects particularly on marginalised groups. Notably, the study provides a critical and reflexive development study analysis that eschews the norm: this approach – leaning towards the developmental interests of indigenous and local constellations – enables a rethink of who really benefits from language policies and politics, allowing for a repositioning of who in fact the language development paradigm is for. Method of Enquiry/Design – Data were collected through an analysis of both latent and extant literature derived from a variety of scholarly sources on language dynamics and imperial notions associated with domineering languages. This approach of navigating through a juxtaposed pool of scholarly works provided a confluence of propositions that informed the study’s inferences, particularly by highlighting the subtleties embedded in the English language hegemony. Most significantly, the themes are also informed by this author’s own personal field anthropological observations; having been born and grown up in Zambia under this same hegemonic English language environment. Findings – The study finds that language regimes that put English above local languages (as is the case in Zambia) have enormous ramifications on the education and emancipatory objectives of locals, especially the marginalised groups. For instance, women are burdened in the sense that they must – in addition to the confronts associated with the imposition of the English language – also struggle to navigate the already challenging patriarchy terrains that are rooted in the Zambian cultural and political settings. Imposing additional inequalities makes the attainment of societal development goals a tall order to achieve. The study concludes that to redress this situation, the local educational curriculum needs to be re-designed and aligned to respond to the aspirations and context of local constellational demands. Also, Black consciousness as an ideology framed in liberation philosophy needs to be re-energised as a pathway towards a society free from systematic foreign oppression; this is the only way that sustainable development could be attained in Zambia. Originality/Value – The study exposes the prevalent fallacy – especially by Western institutions – that Zambians willingly seek out to learn the English language: To the contrary, the choice and acquisition of the English language is often a result of coercive circumstances. In contemporary Zambia, the English language is – to a greater extent – a means to an end; a means for survival in the modern environments that prioritise English language over any local language or local skill. In Zambia, the criteria for skill or intelligence are only seen through the prism of English language competency. Local initiatives and skills suffer stigma as they are perceived to be primitive, backwards, and redundant. English and ‘whiteness’ are seen as the ‘standard measure of goodness’. In fact, many white-collar job workers are ashamed of speaking their local languages in public spaces. In this context then, English in Zambia is not a luxury but a convenient necessity that allows local people to navigate other critical avenues of contemporary life. The study also lays bare the fact that the English language hegemony has brought about elements of distortion of ethnic identity particularly on how people can access their cultural rights. Furthermore, far from being a neutral language – English, in fact aids the entrenchment of neo-imperialist tendencies such as discrimination, exclusion, and subtle promotion of economic inequalities, and educational elitism.
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