How can linguists make the case for their subject in a new and seemingly hostile climate of political populism?
That was the theme of a workshop organised by and held in London on 6 January.
Since the Brexit vote, said Silke Mentchen, senior language teaching officer at the University of Cambridge, she had felt like 鈥渁 bargaining chip鈥, waiting for details of the status of the many European Union nationals working in British universities.
Partly in order to 鈥渃ombat [her] own feelings of powerlessness鈥, she had carried out a survey with Andrea Klaus of the University of Warwick 鈥渄ocumenting the benefits to students of a year abroad鈥, which are often supported by EU funding under Respondents described such years as 鈥渢he highlight of my time at university鈥 and even 鈥渙ne of the most defining features of my life to date鈥.
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Michael Gratzke, professor of German and comparative literature at the University of Hull 鈥 and incoming chair of the UCML 鈥 urged delegates to embrace challenges as opportunities and to 鈥渉elp shape what happens two or three years from now [as a result of the Brexit negotiations]鈥. 聽
Modern linguists needed to 鈥渇ind [their] voice again鈥, he said. Instead of asking 鈥渨hat can I do in cultural studies?鈥 they needed to look for 鈥渢he burning issues we share with our colleagues鈥, develop 鈥渉umanities-led interdisciplinary research鈥 and then approach others to join the team. Projects illustrating what was possible ranged from to his own
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Recent political developments and 鈥減ost-truth attitudes鈥, argued Adrian Armstrong, head of the School of Languages, Linguistics and Film at Queen Mary University of London, seemed to represent 鈥渢he worst nightmare for the enlightened internationalists that we [modern linguists] tend to think we are鈥.聽But they also demonstrated something 鈥渢hat鈥檚 been most influentially observed in political discourse by a linguist, namely George Lakoff 鈥 if you want to convert people, emotion is a lot more powerful than rationality鈥.
So what might it mean to try and make an emotional case for the value of modern languages as a discipline?聽
It should be seen as 鈥渁 matter of social justice鈥, suggested Professor Armstrong, 鈥渢o engage with migrants on different linguistic terms than our own鈥 鈥 a point that was likely to 鈥渞esonate with senior managers as well as prospective students鈥.
He also wanted to celebrate the 鈥渄eeply interdisciplinary character鈥 of a subject involving 鈥渁 range of different skills and approaches (philological, historical, etc) that both require and promote flexibility and empathy鈥o linguists 鈥 even in the unlikely event that they never speak another word of a foreign language after they graduate 鈥 are uniquely well equipped to engage with the complexities and overlapping identities of the modern world.鈥
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