Anglosphere: Conclusion - Page 3

English is the language of the Anglosphere and this language helped to assimilate past immigrants and as Bennett states, “Today's Anglospherists see immigrants forming a new layer of intra-Anglosphere ties, as the East and South Asian, Caribbean, and Mediterranean origins of immigrants throughout the Anglosphere create new cross-relationships.”

The power of English language is underpinned by the spread of Anglo-Saxon values. As I mention previously, the presence of an Anglosphere is no longer a Western phenomena but worldwide phenomena. Where the English language permeates, the American/British values travel with it. India, North American, The British Isle and Australia are unique cultural trend that stretches throughout the world.


Final Lessons of Anglosphere

The Anglosphere is more than just the United States; its a new liberal Alliance whose final contribution is the spread of freedom. Bennett views the Anglosphere as a civic state based on “cultural affinity, essentially voluntarily assumed ties and a shared narrative and culture." This culture has spread beyond what can be classified as the West. India and South Africa are slowly joining the Anglosphere. What does the Anglosphere offer the world? It offers the world a vision of the rule of law and constitutional rule. These institutions lead to limiting power of the rulers and enhanced power for those being governed. In other words, increased freedom.

In the 19th Century, it was the British who ruled the world and the 20th Century was the American century. The 21st Century may expand beyond the American century and become the Anglosphere century as the Anglosphere as a group dominates the world.

The Anglosphere is an ever growing alliance that within the next half-century will include South Africa and India. If successful, this alliance will become the mechanism in which freedom and stability will expand throughout the world. A pundit once wrote that there is no East or West. With the Anglosphere alliance, that statement has become truth.

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  • 1 - Eric Berlin

    Jan 21, 2005 at 4:47 pm

    Tom - Really nice job on this essay. There are some outstanding ideas here, which you collect and explicate on very well.

    Please carefully review your work for typos, spelling, and consistent author names. It might help a lot to have someone edit your work.

    Also, please include a link to Amazon with all posts.

  • 2 - Aaman

    Jan 21, 2005 at 4:52 pm

    Yep - good reading. Not a new idea, and one that was severely misused in the days of the British Empire, which is why I'm wary of it.

    It's best(?) misapplication came from Sir Nirad Chaudhuri, Nobel Laureate and self-adopted British Empire apologist. He dedicated his opus "Autobiography Of An Unknown Indian"

    "To the memory of the British Empire in India, which conferred subjecthood upon us but withheld citizenship; to which yet every one of us threw out the challenge "Civis Britannicus sum" [I am a British citizen] because all that was good and living within us was made, shaped, and quickened by the same British rule."

  • 3 - Stuart Payen

    Oct 20, 2005 at 4:22 pm

    ...the language of liberty: English.'

    Oy. That rather contrasts with:

    'Mr. Das said the English language, “…introduced Indian minds to liberal ideas and the ideals of the French Revolution...'

    And I'm not sure about such statements as:
    'The Anglosphere is an ever growing alliance that within the next half-century will include South Africa and India'

    Living in South Africa, I don't see it joining an Anglosphere. It may be English-speaking but it is deeply opposed to the US and UK almost as a matter of course.


    There have been other dominant languages in the past - and there will be others in the future. People smile if you mention space exploration in connection with this but it's not just fantasy. What if a planet is colonised mainly by, say, Japanese speakers and that planet becomes a dominant force?

    Chaucer wrote for a very small audience.

  • 4 - Stuart Payen

    Oct 20, 2005 at 4:53 pm

    An interesting article arguing differently:
    http://faculty.ed.umuc.edu/~jmatthew/articles/Whatglobal.html

  • 5 - Stuart Payen

    Oct 21, 2005 at 7:38 am

    It’s true that English is very widely spoken but I think those of us who speak it as our first language underestimate how shallow its roots are in many countries. We see people from all over the world being interviewed on CNN or BBC World in English; we see less of their many compatriots who don’t speak a word of it.
    I suppose spheres of languages would leave Spanish, Portuguese, Russian, Arabic, Chinese etc. spheres, with a sphere consisting of former French colonies and a French-led EU. (Although France at various times ruled, or at least was present on, much of the planet, colonialism is less important in its history than European leadership and the new century could see an even more French-led EU â€" new projections show it as the largest country in the EU by the middle of this century, which I suppose goes to show how much all out discussions about the future are worth, since not long ago it was predicted that France’s population wouldn’t rise much at all. Of course that’s mainly a different discussion and anyway you can debate about whether a growing population and greater influence are all that desirable).
    Countries do seem to be brought together by language, even against their will, but I think that should not be encouraged. It distorts views, blinding people to certain similarities and differences and making them see similarities and differences where there are none.
    And, after all, this spread of languages is based to a large extent on the willingness of the speakers of those languages to beat up those weaker than themselves, which makes me rather uncomfortable. I’m sure it’s unrealistic but I wish children would be taught languages just for the languages and their literature.
    Of course - more hopefully - the learning of one language needn’t mean the disappearance of another. In Tunisia, if I remember correctly, pupils begin schooling in Arabic (the official language), a couple of years later they study French (the unofficial second language), a couple of years later English and a couple of years after that German or Italian. I was on holiday there recently and a cab driver of mine could speak seven languages.

    Thanks for the article. It's always good to see thoughtful writings, even when I disagree with them.

  • 6 - Nancy

    Oct 21, 2005 at 8:05 am

    I'm always surprised English is as widespoken as it is, since while in some respects (lack of gender in nouns & adjectives, few cases in verbs) it's deceptively simple, the rest of it is (for those not born to it - and even seemingly for some of those who have been) a bear with the wildly irregular verb forms, spellings, & idiosyncrasies, not to mention the huge & growing vocabulary, especially in technical jargons. A recent article I read asserted that someone can "get by" at a high school graduate level with just 5-700 words of almost any other language, but in English, it requires 2,800 or more for a comparable 'level'. Of course, it's also an incredibly rich language, with synonyms & words taken from every language, so that almost everything can be spoken of in at least 2 if not more ways for the same thing. A good altho not recent book, but very entertaining, is The Mother Tongue by Bill Bryson, for those who are interested. I'd also recommend watching the old PBS series on The Story of English, if you can get hold of the tapes.

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