Preface
Introduction
Chapter 1: The English Divide
Part I: Multilingual Europe
Chapter 2: Myth or Reality?
Chapter 3: A High-Stakes Movement
Chapter 4: Shakespeare in the Crossfire
Chapter 5: Headwinds from the North
Part II: Shadows of Colonialism
Chapter 6: The "New Scramble" for Africa
Chapter 7: Adieu to French
Chapter 8: Redress and Transformation
Chapter 9: Confronting the Raj
Part III: Defying the Monolingual Mindset
Chapter 10: Defining the Deficit
Chapter 11: Reshaping the Narrative
Chapter 12: A Revolution in the Making
Chapter 13: Marketing Language
Conclusion
Chapter 14: Looking Back, Moving Forward
References
Index
Rosemary Salomone is the Kenneth Wang Professor of Law at St.
John's University School of Law (USA). Trained as a linguist and a
lawyer, she is an internationally recognized expert and commentator
on language rights, education law and policy, and comparative
equality. An elected member of the American Law Institute and
fellow of the American Bar Foundation, she is a former faculty
member of the Graduate School of Education at Harvard
University,
lecturer in Harvard's Institute for Educational Management, and
trustee of the State University of New York. In addition to The
Rise of English: Global Politics and the Power of Language (awarded
the 2023 Premio Pavese
in non-fiction by Italy's Fondazione Cesare Pavese), her books
include True American; Same, Different, Same, Different, Equal
(selected as an "Outstanding Academic Title for 2005" by Choice
Magazine); Visions of Schooling; and Equal Education Under Law.
In writing this interesting, solid book, Salomone...was well served
by her legal background in assessing multiple case studies in which
the rise of English is evident as language, law, and politics
interact in Europe and in various postcolonial settings.
*M. A. Morris, Clemson University, Choice Connect*
[A] panoramic, endlessly fascinating and eye-opening book, with an
arresting fact on nearly every page. . . . meticulous and nuanced
in chronicling the battles being fought over language policy in
countries ranging from Italy to Congo, and analyzing the unexpected
winners and losers.
*Amy Chua, The New York Times*
In this relevant, timely historical analysis, [Rosemary Salomone]
tackles many of the relevant angles in the 'English only'
debate.... A pertinent, accessible study that asks a big question:
What language should the world speak?
*Kirkus*
A dazzling voyage around the globe uncovering how and why English
reigns supreme in the modern world—and what it means for countries,
markets, and populations. From France to India, then to China and
beyond, Rosemary Salomone excavates the law and politics of
language beneath sites of cultural, economic, and social
contestation. Fascinating, multidimensional and urgent, The Rise of
English traverses intellectual terra nova that reveals the blessing
and curse of English global domination. Bravo!
*Richard Albert, William Stamps Farish Professor in Law and
Professor of Government, The University of Texas at Austin*
The Rise of English provides an important study of the role of
English in society and education. Rosemary Salomone has not only
has written a unique comprehensive overview and analysis of the
historical, colonial, and current influence of English; she also
gives valuable insights to its competitors and to the future
dominance of English.
*Hans de Wit, Professor Emeritus and Distinguished Fellow, Center
for International Higher Education, Boston College*
Based on an overwhelming amount of source material, The Rise of
English by Rosemary Salamone provides a panoramic, tremendously
informative and always gripping overview of the supremacy of
English in today's world and of the push and pull factors that gave
it its unique role as the dominant lingua franca. The book combines
a broad scope with a keen eye for detail, guiding the reader
through countries and continents, along language policies,
legislation, and lawsuits. The ever increasing dominance of English
in higher education, Europe's policy of multilingualism, Africa's
and India's colonial past, and the advantages of individual and
societal bilingualism - these are just a few of the many themes
that are covered, authoritatively and eruditely. This book is a
really impressive tour de force and reading it a rich and rewarding
experience.
*Annette de Groot, Professor of Experimental Psycholinguistics,
University of Amsterdam*
In this penetrating analysis of language policies and practices
around the world, Professor Salomone reveals a fundamental paradox.
In most nations, multilingualism is the norm and English serves as
the lingua franca of commerce for purely pragmatic reasons.
Meanwhile, in the United States, language remains mired in ideology
and identity politics, producing a monolingual mindset with
isolating consequences on the international stage. English
dominates and distances at the same time.
*Rachel F. Moran, , Distinguished Professor of Law, UC Irvine
School of Law*
The Rise of English is a highly impressive feat of academic
research on the dominant role of the English language across very
different sociolinguistic contexts around the globe. Rosemary
Salomone's style is remarkable and her comprehensive and creative
analyses make the book a must read for a worldwide readership. I
have no doubt that this book will become a classic in the field of
language policy.
*Christine Hélot, Emeritus Professor of English, University of
Strasbourg*
The rise of English is a complex process, which combines plain
domination and voluntary commitment, cultural hegemony and
pragmatic considerations, economic imperatives and cosmopolitan
dreams. Drawing on evidence from four Continents, Rosemary Salomone
masterfully tackles this complexity and shows that building
sustainable structures of transnational communication requires
fostering multilingualism.
*Peter A. Kraus, Professor of Political Science, University of
Augsburg*
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