ENGLISH LANGUAGE AMENDMENT
Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language
|
1998
|
|
© Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language 1998, originally published by Oxford University Press 1998. (Hide copyright information)
Copyright
ENGLISH LANGUAGE AMENDMENT Short form ELA. A proposed amendment to the constitution of the US that would make English the official language of the republic. The aim of the proponents of
ELA is to ensure that English retains its leading role in US society, especially in the face of actual or potential competition from
SPANISH. Despite a widespread assumption to the contrary, English has no official status in the US. For over two centuries, however, it has been the
de facto national language which the vast majority of non-English-speaking immigrants have sought to adopt. In 1981, Senator Samuel Hayakawa, an American of Japanese background, introduced a constitutional amendment to make English the official language.
US English
Hayakawa did not succeed in his aim, but others have reintroduced the proposal, and following lack of action on his original measure he founded in 1983, with John Tanton, an organization called
US ENGLISH, to support and promote the cause. This is a nationwide, non-profit-making, non-partisan organization, currently with some 350,000 members and a board of advisers that includes the writers Jacques Barzun, Saul Bellow, and Gore Vidal, and the journalist Alistair Cooke. It promotes English as a common bond (a ‘blessing’ that integrates America's diverse population) and often refers to official French/English bilingualism in Canada as a source of disharmony that Americans should seek to avoid. In addition to its concern that English be made official,
US English holds that every effort should be made, particularly through education, to assist newcomers to acquire English. At the same time, it rejects linguistic chauvinism, nativism, and xenophobia, encourages foreign-language study, supports individual and private rights to use and maintain languages other than English, and does not propose to prohibit forms of bilingual education intended to ease children into English ability.
Spanish
Both John Tanton and Linda Chavez (a former president of the organization) have explained why
US English was founded when it was: in the past, of the many languages in or brought to the US, none had the capacity to threaten English. This state of affairs has changed, however, with the influx of Spanish-speaking immigrants, especially in such areas as southern Florida, the Southwest, and such large cities as New York. Members do not favour a change in bilingual education from the transitional (in which English replaces the mother tongue) to maintenance (in which a language like Spanish is retained alongside English). They also oppose the provision of bilingual Spanish/English ballots and comparable services.
Support
There appears to be considerable popular and political support for
OFFICIAL ENGLISH, English for US, and
English First, as the movement is variously called. A ‘sense of the Senate’ measure declaring English official has been passed three times in recent years as an attachment to immigration legislation. Such declarations do not, however, have the force of law. Seventeen states of the Union have made English their official language: Nebraska 1920, Illinois 1969, Virginia 1981, Indiana 1984, Kentucky 1984, Tennessee 1984, California 1986, Georgia 1986, Arkansas 1987, Mississippi 1987, North Carolina 1987, North Dakota 1987, Sorth Carolina 1987, Arizona 1988, Colorado 1988, Florida 1988, Alabama 1990, Montana 1995, New Hampshire 1995, South Dakota 1995, Wyoming 1996; in 1978, Hawaii made both English and Hawaiian official. Legislation is pending or planned in Maryland, Massachusetts, Missouri, New York, and West Virginia. Public-opinion polls in a variety of locations have also shown considerable support for English. Many have been relatively casual, often conducted by newspapers, radio, and television, but others have been taken by reputable survey organizations.
Opposition
US English has since the outset been subject to strong opposition. Many academics and ethnic leaders have seen it as a nativist organization that panders to the prejudices and entrenched attitudes of unilingual whites. Linda Chavez reports being called a fascist traitor to her own Hispanic heritage, and has been picketed at speaking engagements. A president of
La Raza (a Hispanic political movement) compared
US English to the Ku Klux Klan, and the journalist James Crawford has linked the group to allegedly racist funding agencies (through organizations called
US Inc. and the
Federation for American Immigration Reform, the latter also founded by John Tanton). These agencies include the Pioneer Fund, created in 1937 to promote ‘racial betterment’ through eugenics. Crawford has written about a leaked memorandum by Tanton which expresses fear of Hispanic control over America and lists such dangers as Roman Catholicism, large families, and a tradition of bribery. Linda Chavez resigned as president when she learned of this statement.
American organizations that have either explicitly or indirectly attacked
US English and Official English include the
National Education Association (a teacher's union), the
National Council of Teachers of English,
Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL), the
Linguistic Society of America,
and the Modern Language Association. Many see it as promoting an English-only policy rather than simply Official English, despite claims to the contrary. Reaction has led to the
ENGLISH PLUS pressure group (formed in 1987), which encourages Americans to be bilingual (English plus one or more other languages). It had its genesis in statements by the
Spanish-American League Against Discrimination (
SALAD: an acronym that implies disagreement with the traditional concept of the melting pot), and in 1987 established the
English Plus Information Clearinghouse (
EPIC), to canvass support and disseminate its views. Adherents to the idea of English Plus have proposed a constitutional amendment of their own: the
Cultural Rights Amendment, which would give legal backing to the preservation and promotion of ethnic and linguistic diversity.
Conclusion
There is evidence that Hispanic immigrants tend, like others before them, to shed their original language so as to join the mainstream of American life. Such evidence of language shift does not, however, impress English-speakers in Miami or southern California who feel threatened by the powerful presence of an alternative language and culture. Similarly, despite disclaimers by
US English, and its support for transitional bilingual programmes for adults, an impression of chauvinism among native speakers of English is being projected that arouses and reinforces old anxieties among non-English-speakers. Although the primacy of English in the US is hardly in doubt, people on both sides of the argument are likely to feel threatened for some time to come, whatever happens.
See
AMERICAN ENGLISH,
AMERICAN LANGUAGE.
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
The English Languages.
Magazine article from: Contemporary Review; 10/1/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...question if they should be seen as languages or varieties of a single tongue...founding editor of the quarterly English Today: The International Review of the English Language and of The Oxford Companion to the English Language (1992), Tom McArthur...
|
|
The English languages. (Reviews).
Magazine article from: Studia Anglica Posnaniensia: international review of English Studies; 1/1/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...contact with local languages on different levels. English remains, at the...the vernacular language of a particular...speak "the same language". McArthur's book, The English languages, presents the...in the book (language, dialect, acrolect...etc.). The English ...
|
|
Kanji and kana on the Internet. (non-English languages)(The Economist Review)
Magazine article from: The Economist (US); 9/6/1997; 700+ words
; ...most commonly used language on the Web after English was German. A year...the 17 most common languages in the world, the...frequently encountered was English. It accounted for...side by side. Roman languages such as English, French...the browser direct to ...
|
|
Pillows of Anglo-Saxony. (French and English languages)
Magazine article from: The Economist (US); 6/26/1993; 700+ words
; A FOREIGN language, the French believe, is...perfectly familiar with two languages are apt to speak both fluently...of the pollution of their language by foreign ones, above all...Has not their language taken English and boldly created from it...botte on the other foot. English is ...
|
|
AT&T Natural Voices Announces Support for French & U.K. English Languages in Text-To-Speech Engine.
PR Newswire; 7/22/2002; 700+ words
; ...Kingdom (British) English language support for the...industry. The new languages are available immediately...text-to-speech language or voice font...dialect. The U.K. English voice fonts, which...Claire (U.S. English). AT&...support all available languages for dialogue or...
|
|
Exploring epistemological beliefs of bilingual Filipino preservice teachers in the Filipino and English languages.(Report)
Magazine article from: The Journal of Psychology; 3/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...epistemological beliefs of Filipino-English bilingual preservice teachers...epistemological beliefs written in English, the Schommer Epistemological...the preservice teachers in two languages: Filipino and English. Hofer and Pintrich (1997...
|
|
English-Language Bill Attacked; Hispanics Fear State Measure Would Erect Barrier to Services
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 2/21/1991; ; 700+ words
; ...legislation would have made English the official language of instruction in public schools. The "English-only" provision now...instruction in other languages for the purpose of integrating...residents with limited English into the educational...
|
|
English Language Unity Act Introduced in House by Rep. King
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 2/19/2007; 700+ words
; ...has introduced the English Language Unity Act of 2007...art or phrases from languages other than English.`Sec. 164. Uniform English language rule for naturalization...understand generally the English language text of the...
|
|
English language narratives of Filipino children.
Magazine article from: Language, Speech, & Hearing Services in Schools; 1/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...their knowledge of one language to generate utterances in the other language when the languages share structures that...superficial similarities of English and Filipino can lead...However, when cross-language differences are unambiguous...to transfer across languages. Significant ...
|
|
English language education increases
Newspaper article from: Des Plaines Times (IL); 11/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...children can learn languages easily is no really...process of learning English. "It's a myth...kids can learn a language faster," she...each language, English Language Learners teachers...with different languages in the same class...receive in foreign languages. In many ...
|
|
ENGLISH LANGUAGES
Book article from: Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language
...linguists and other commentators to suggest that ENGLISH is a group of languages (comparable to the Romance languages) rather than one language: ‘The European Society for the Study of English has been founded to encourage European understanding...
|
|
English language
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...see Germanic languages ). Spoken by...throughout the world, English is the official language of about 45 nations...used auxiliary language in the world...United Nations uses English not only as one of its official languages but also as one...Changed and Changing Language Like ...
|
|
English Language
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
...x2026; of American and not of English growth." The separation of the "two streams of English" was already noticeable...rules: "Standard [British] English must always strike an American...p. 774). Judgment by Language: The Shibboleth Once there...Hebrew, like all other languages, had many ...
|
|
ENGLISH LANGUAGE AMENDMENT
Book article from: Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language
...English be made official, US English holds that every effort should...assist newcomers to acquire English. At the same time, it rejects...xenophobia, encourages foreign-language study, supports individual...rights to use and maintain languages other than English, and does not propose ...
|
|
‘Johnson's Dictionary’, A Dictionary of the English Language
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
...x2019;, A Dictionary of the English Language, by S. Johnson , published 1755...dictionary, the first of its kind in English. A Plan and dedication to Chesterfield...until the creation of the Oxford English Dictionary . His well-known playful...
|