Abstract
A mid current geopolitical shifts, including “America First” tendencies in U.S. policy, the future dominance of English as a ‘global’ language is often questioned. Historical precedence, however, suggests that some ‘great’ languages expand and stabilise after their founding empires recede: Sanskrit, Latin and Classical Arabic each evolved from empire-driven lingua francas into durable lingua cosmopolitanas, marked by a fading centrality of native speakers, internally generated prestige and long-term supra-regional stability. This paper asks whether English is more likely to contract with U.S. hegemonic decline or to follow a similar consolidating path. Using historical sociolinguistic comparison, it examines three enabling conditions: initial spread through an inclusive empire, early embedding in core cultural frameworks (now secular infrastructures such as science, pop culture, standards and platforms), and a weakening of native-speaker reference. The analysis argues that English is more likely to consolidate as shared global infrastructure, with emerging Asian centres increasingly driving this cosmopolitan English.
| Originalsprache | Englisch |
|---|---|
| Seiten (von - bis) | 222-234 |
| Seitenumfang | 13 |
| Fachzeitschrift | Asian Englishes: An International Journal of the Sociolinguistics of English in Asia/Pacific |
| Jahrgang | 28 |
| Ausgabenummer | 1 |
| Frühes Online-Datum | Dez. 2025 |
| DOIs | |
| Publikationsstatus | Veröffentlicht - 2026 |
ÖFOS 2012
- 602008 Anglistik
- 602009 Arabistik
- 602057 Historische Linguistik
Fingerprint
Untersuchen Sie die Forschungsthemen von „English as a ‘global’ language in a geopolitically changing world – the telling patterns observable in historical precedents“. Zusammen bilden sie einen einzigartigen Fingerprint.Zitationsweisen
- APA
- Author
- BIBTEX
- Harvard
- Standard
- RIS
- Vancouver