TY - JOUR
T1 - "The universal language of the future"
T2 - decolonization, development, and the American embrace of global English, 1945-1965
AU - Lemberg, Diana
N1 - Funding information: Research for the article was supported in part by a Hong Kong Research Grants Council Early Career Scheme award.
PY - 2018/8/1
Y1 - 2018/8/1
N2 - The two decades following the Second World War were marked by geopolitical and pedagogical ferment, as researchers and policymakers debated the role of language teaching in a rapidly changing world. As European empires collapsed amid Cold War competition for global influence, limited colonial education systems gave way to new discourses connecting postcolonial educational expansion, international development aid, and language teaching. This article reveals increasing American interest in the connections between development and vehicular English from 1945 to 1965. Drawing on the work of anglophone reformers, American elites promoted English as a development tool, and institutionalized policies designed to spread it abroad. The rise of the idea of global English in the United States, the article shows, was rooted in an instrumental conception of language, which framed English as a politically neutral vehicle for communication, yet this discourse was contradicted by the United States' strategic ambitions.
AB - The two decades following the Second World War were marked by geopolitical and pedagogical ferment, as researchers and policymakers debated the role of language teaching in a rapidly changing world. As European empires collapsed amid Cold War competition for global influence, limited colonial education systems gave way to new discourses connecting postcolonial educational expansion, international development aid, and language teaching. This article reveals increasing American interest in the connections between development and vehicular English from 1945 to 1965. Drawing on the work of anglophone reformers, American elites promoted English as a development tool, and institutionalized policies designed to spread it abroad. The rise of the idea of global English in the United States, the article shows, was rooted in an instrumental conception of language, which framed English as a politically neutral vehicle for communication, yet this discourse was contradicted by the United States' strategic ambitions.
U2 - 10.1017/S1479244317000166
DO - 10.1017/S1479244317000166
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85019599278
SN - 1479-2443
VL - 15
SP - 561
EP - 592
JO - Modern Intellectual History
JF - Modern Intellectual History
IS - 2
ER -