1 / 36

The Language of Democracy: Vernacular or Esperanto?

The Language of Democracy: Vernacular or Esperanto? Daniele Archibugi Italian National Research Council University of London Birkbeck Charles V What is the language of democracy? Will Kymlicka’s answer Politics in the Vernacular :

libitha
Download Presentation

The Language of Democracy: Vernacular or Esperanto?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Language of Democracy:Vernacular or Esperanto? Daniele Archibugi Italian National Research Council University of London Birkbeck

  2. Charles V

  3. What is the language of democracy? Will Kymlicka’s answer Politics in the Vernacular: “democratic politics is politics in the vernacular. The average citizen only feels comfortable debating political issues in their own tongue. As a general rule, it is only elites who have fluency with more than one language, and who have the continual opportunity to maintain and develop these language skills, and who feel comfortable debating political issues in another tongue with multilingual settings. Moreover, political communication has a large ritualistic component, and these ritualised forms of communication are typically language-specific. Even if one understands a foreign language in the technical sense, without knowledge of the ritualistic elements one may be unable to understand political debates. For these and other reasons, we can expect – as a general rule – that the more political debate is conducted in the vernacular, the more participatory it will be”

  4. It does some damage to the notion of a global public sphere Can the public opinion be the “Queen of the World”? (William Ladd, 1844)

  5. It does some damage to the notion of a global civil society How can the single components interact among each other? Shall we go back to the ethnic or linguistic composition of nations?

  6. It does some damage to the proposal of a cosmopolitan democracy A global polity for everybody or just for the elites? Cosmopolitanism can be democratic? Democracy can be cosmopolitan?

  7. Aggregative or Deliberative Democracy? • A purely aggregative democracy may perhaps work also without a proper linguistic understanding • But a strong and communicative democracy cannot • Neither the multiculturalists nor the cosmopolitans support an aggregative democracy

  8. Kymlicka’s Remark: Is it a Description of Reality or a Normative Principle? • If it is a description of reality it is trivial • As a normative principle, it may lead to a “democratic” ethnic cleansing • Watch the historical propensity of democratic communities to be xenophobic

  9. Dogville by Lars von Trier

  10. A normative principle: democratic politics should be in Esperanto The language for democratic politics is not a mean to affirm identity but to be an instrument of communication

  11. Democratic predisposition • Equality of members • Participation • Non violent conflict resolution • Willingness to understand the arguments of members of the same community of fate

  12. Cosmopolitanism and Multiculturalism: How different are their visions? • States are imagined communities • States repress minority cultures • Language diversity is a human value and it should be preserved • Democratic politics should involve the largest amount of stakeholders

  13. Single out the differences between multiculturalism and cosmopolitanism: • How should political communities deal wity problems that cut across different linguistic communities safeguarding individual liberties, maximizing political participation and applying democratic procedures?

  14. Four cases • A state school in Pasadena, California • The city of Bialystok (Russia at the time) • Indian Democracy • The European Parliament

  15. A School in Pasadena, California A school with an increasing number of Spanish speaking children. Lower proficiency of the Spanish speaking children Perceived lower level of efficiency of the school. Even in Rugby, Hispanics are less talented than Anglos Growing tension among the two communities

  16. Races in Pasadena: 32.3 % of the population is foreign born Whites 53.4% Latinos 33.4% African-American, 14.4% Asian 10.0% American Indian 0.7% Pacific Islander 0.1% Other race 16.0%

  17. Languages in Pasadena English only is spoken by 55% of the population over age five. The Spanish language is spoken by 29.3% of the population over age five. The proportion of those speaking a language other than English at home is 45%; 22.2% do not speak English well.

  18. From a Harvard Professor,Department of Government “There is only the American dream created by an Anglo-Protestant Society. Mexican Americans will share in that dream and in that society only if they dream in English”

  19. MULTICULTARIST Crucial role of language for identity Separate the children into two different sections, each with the main language in their vernacular Rugby for Anglos, soccer for Hispanics COSMOPOLITAN “The best language of education for any child is the best language for this child” (Thomas Pogge) Education in English for all, Spanish as second language As joint sport, baseball Salsa for all parents

  20. The city of Bialystock, East Poland

  21. The city of Bialystock, East Poland Four language communities in 1870s: • Russian (4,000 peoples) • Polish (3,000 peoples) • German (5,000 peoples) • Yiddish (18,000 peoples)

  22. Lejzer Ludwig Zamenhofinventor of Esperanto Esperanto as a simple language (as the newspeak) Not meant to substitute live languages, but to allow communication It could have solved a small problem in Bialystock, a great problem in the world

  23. Indian Parliament, Many Official Languages

  24. The Indian State • 18 official languages • Official language different in each state • English (i.e. an artificial construction) has become the lingua franca • The majority language, hindi, was resisted by many ethnic minority groups • English is still less known but more acceptable. Language of the èlites

  25. European Parliament20 European Languages

  26. Should the languages be reduced? • Proposal to reduce the languages to two • To increase the number of translators and interpreters • To go back to Latin as the lingua franca of Europe

  27. Mario Capanna and Otto von Hapsburg

  28. Vernacular Increases the amount of participants Direct understanding within the community Role of elites is reduced internally but increases externally Esperanto It allows the formation of cross-border alliances and parties It does not require intermediaries Elites have an advantage in communication Vernacular or Esperanto?

  29. Is there a solution? • Bi-lingual education • Identification of a language of communication • It will be at the expense of the demos for the first years, but in perspective it will allow a language for political communication

  30. Citizens of All World, Converse!

More Related