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Scholarly Paper (Advanced Seminar), 2004, 28 Pages
Author: Martin Liboska
Subject: English Language and Literature Studies - Linguistics
Details
Institution/College: University of Duisburg-Essen (Institute for Foreign Language Philology - Anglistics/American Studies)
Tags: Views, Cameroon, English, Hauptseminar, English, Varieties
Year: 2004
Pages: 28
Grade: good+
Bibliography: ~ 28 Entries
Language: English
ISBN (E-book): 978-3-638-31114-4
File size: 327 KB
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Excerpt (computer-generated)
UNIVERSITÄT DUISBURG-ESSEN
Institut für fremdsprachliche Philologien
Angewandte Linguistik
Linguistik Seminar: English Varieties
New Views on Cameroon English
von: Martin Liboska
Contents
1. INTRODUCTION 3
2. THE STATE OF KNOWLEDGE ABOUT “ENGLISH IN WEST AFRICA” BEFORE THE YEAR 2000 4
2.1 THE COMPLEX LINGUISTIC SITUATION IN WEST AFRICA 4
2.1.1 The status of English in West Africa 5
2.1.2 The function and use of English in West Africa 5
2.2 THE VARIETIES OF ENGLISH IN WEST AFRICA 6
2.2.1 West African Pidgin and Creole English 7
2.2.2 Standard West African English (WAE) 8
3. NEW VIEWS ON CAMEROON ENGLISH: DISTIN CT NATIONAL VARIETY OF ENGLISH? 10
3.1. THE SOCIOLINGUISTIC SITUATION IN CAMEROON AND THE ANGLOPHONE SPEECH COMMUNITY 11
3.1.1 The de facto status of English in Cameroon 12
3.1.2 The Anglophone speech community 13
3.1.3 Cameroon English: a symbol of Anglophone “identity” 15
3.2 LEXICAL PECULIARITIES OF CAME 17
3.2.1 Frenchification of the lexicon of CamE 17
3.2.2 Nativization of Cameroon English 19
3.2.3 Contextualization 21
4. CONCLUSION 23
APPENDIX 26
REFERENCES 27
1. Introduction
English in West Africa is a complex field of investigation in the broader context of the “World Englishes”. For many years, researchers have focused on linguistic characteristics of the numerous varieties of English in this area and mostly subsumed them under the label “English in Africa” or “West African English” (WAE) (e.g., Spencer 1971; Todd 1984b; Kachru 1995, Schmied 1991). Only little attention has been paid to the single national varieties1 including Cameroon English (henceforth CamE), which is in fact a very interesting case for sociolinguistic analysis due to its status as a co-official language beside French in a multilingual environment. This paper aims to show that new approaches to the national West African varieties, in this case CamE, try to fill the gap of comparative research in this linguistic area. The first part of this paper shall introduce the reader to the complexity of the linguistic situation in West Africa in general. The status, function, and use of English in the anglophone West African countries will be determined in chapter 2. Then I will give an overview about the development of the two most important varieties of English spoken there, namely Pidgin English (PE) and WAE. This chapter will therefore serve as a basis of knowledge for the third chapter, which is the main part of this paper and deals with the new approach of Hans-Georg Wolf (2001) to “English in Cameroon”. By showing the results of the author’s study about the extraordinary sociolinguistic situation in Cameroon on the one hand and the lexical peculiarities of CamE on the other hand, I will support his main thesis, which classifies CamE as a distinct national variety within the linguistic region of West Africa. Finally, I will draw a conclusion and give proposals for further studies in this field of investigation.
2. The state of knowledge about “English in West Africa” before the year 2000
The English language in West Africa is present in a continuum of forms ranging from native-like English, via local second language varieties to Pidgin English or Creoles. In Gambia, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Ghana, Nigeria, and Cameroon, English is mostly spoken as an L2 (cf. Gramley and Pätzold 1992: 423-25). Still in Liberia, a state created for repatriation of freed black slaves from America, English is the first language for about 20% of the population (US.G.CIA 2003a, online). Apart from native and second language English, Pidgin English is a widespread lingua franca. This former language of trade is used in many varieties along the coast in all six West African countries (cf. Gramley and Pätzold 1992: 423). Furthermore, Pidgin English has become creolized in some areas. In Sierra Leone, for example, Krio, an English-based creole, is an L1 for 10% of the population and 95% of the remainder understand this official language (US.G.CIA 2003b, online). The linguistic complexity of anglophone West Africa and its most important English varieties will be described in the following sections.
2.1 The complex linguistic situation in West Africa
West Africa is with its estimated 1000 or more indigenous languages one of the most linguistically complex regions in the world (cf. Todd 1982b: 281). The exact number of languages in the six anglophone West African countries is unknown because of difficulties in classification of languages and dialects2. However, the Ethnologue (Grimes, B. (ed.) SIL 2004a- f, online) lists 471 languages for Nigeria, 282 for Cameroon, 34 in Liberia and in Ghana, 23 in Sierra Leone, and 13 for Gambia. On top of all the indigenous languages the colonial languages, i.e. English, French and Portuguese, have been superinduced in the former colonies. English has become the most important second language in West Africa and is usually referred to as West African English (WAE) or Standard West African English (StWAE) (cf. Gramley and Pätzold 1992: 424f. ; Todd 1982b: 287f.; Schmied 1991: 60f. ). The following two sections describe the status of the English language in the six anglophone states on the one hand, and its function and use on the other hand.
2.1.1 The status of English in West Africa
A crucial factor in determining the status of English in a country is the government’s language policy. Usually the government allocates which language is used in administration, parliament, jurisdiction and education by laws. The co-existence of so many languages in the West African nation-states has raised the problem of finding an adequate language for education and as a means of general interethnic communication. Often the choice has fallen on the colonial languages, because there was no widely accepted indigenous language to fulfill this function (cf. Schmied 1991: 23-27). In Gambia, Sierra Leone, Liberia, and Ghana, the choice has fallen on English as the sole official language. In Nigeria, next to English, the three major indigenous languages Hausa, Yoruba, and Igbo are being developed additionally as official languages. Cameroon, however, is a special case in West Africa, because French and English are both official languages. The reason for this is the unification of the former separated British and French colonial areas. Despite the different language policies, all six states use English for educational, administrative and many other official and unofficial purposes (Spencer 1971: 1; cf. Gramley and Pätzold 1992: 424).
2.1.2 The function and use of English in West Africa
English fulfills most of the developmental and educational functions in West Africa. Schmied (1991: 26) and Gramley and Pätzold (1992: 424), talk of “triglossia” with a linguistic hierarchy determined by geographical range: at the bottom, African vernaculars are used for local (often rural) communication; at an intermediate level, the regional languages (African lingua franca) are common for wider communication; and the outside or exogenous language, in this case English, are used for national and international communication. The vernaculars and English are not in conflict, but are rather complementary in most environments. English has the function of a ‘high language’ used in formal and public situations and in writing, whereas local languages are the ‘low languages’ used in informal, private, vernacular, oral communication. Speakers of different ethnic groups, who do not share a native language, prefer to communicate in a regional, ethnically neutral language. If there is no ethnically neutral lingua franca, English (in any form) will be used for interethnic communication (Schmied 1991: 27; cf. Gramley and Pätzold 1992: 424). Schmied further emphasizes that “[on] the whole, […], the delicate bi- or trifocal sociolinguistic pattern has remained remarkably stable in many African countries over the last few decades” (Schmied 1991: 27). When talking about the English language in Africa, one has to be aware of the fact that it is spoken there in many varieties. The next section deals with these varieties of English.
2.2 The varieties of English in West Africa
[...]
1 Nigerian English is an exception, because Nigeria’s great dominance in terms of population makes this variety the prototype of WAE (cf. Wolf 2001: 42)
2 For a detailed discussion of methodological difficulties in the classification of languages and dialects see Wolf 2001: 149f.
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