Globish : How the English Language Became the World's Language
Globish : How the English Language Became the World's Language
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Author(s): McCrum, Robert
ISBN No.: 9780670918874
Pages: 310
Year: 201005
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 26.72
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

A small island in the North Atlantic, colonized by Rome, then pillaged for hundreds of years by marauding neighbours, becomes the dominant world power in the nineteenth century. As its power spreads, its language inevitably follows. Then, across the Atlantic, a colony of that tiny island grows into the military and cultural colossus of the twentieth century. These centuries of empire-building and war, international trade and industrial ingenuity will bring to the world great works of literature and extraordinary movies, cricket pitches and episodes of Dallas, the printing press and the internet. But then what? As Robert McCrum demonstrates in his hugely enjoyable and provocative new book, what happens next is quite unprecedented. While the global dominance of Anglo-American power appears to be on the wane, the English language has acquired an astonishing new life of its own. With a supra-national momentum, it is now able to zoom across time and space at previously unimaginable speeds. In McCrum's analysis, the cultural revolution of our times is the emergence of English, a global phenomenon as never before, to become the world's language.


In the twenty-first century, writes the author, 'English + Microsoft = Globish'. 'It is a delight to read a book that probes the territory of semantics.' The Spectator 'McCrum is out to entertain and inform as well as to preach. His book is excitingly energetic. He leaps with polymathic abandon from one discipline to another: lexicography, history, demography, linguistics, reportage.' The Daily Telegraph 'Intelligent, thoughtful, and comprehensive. It reminds one how inseparable the history of the language is from the history of the nation . written in the most impeccable standard English style' Simon Heffer, Literary Review.



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