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English as Global Language: Problems, Dangers, Opportunities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2024

Eva Kushner*
Affiliation:
University of Toronto

Extract

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To say that globalization is on all our minds would be both trite and excessive. Yet for many years we have known that we live in the ‘global village’ and, as humanists, we have even rejoiced in the fact that the various technologies facilitating communications and travel have woven our world into one, concretely and visibly. We know that the Other is not out or down there but right here; that the suffering of the Other, for example that of the Third World, is with us constantly in images and statistics. In many ways this has been the fulfilment of many dreams: Christian, humanist, cosmopolitan dreams in which humanity is indeed one.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © ICPHS 2003

References

Homer-Dixon, Thomas (2001) ‘We Need a Forest of Tongues’, The Globe and Mail: 7 July.Google Scholar
Tucker, C. Richard and Gray, Tracy C. (1980) ‘The Pursuit of Equal Opportunity’, Language and Society no. 2 (summer): 8. [Published in Ottawa by the Commissioner of Official Languages.]Google Scholar