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El. knyga: Glocal English: The Changing Face and Forms of Nigerian English in a Global World

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Glocal English compares the usage patterns and stylistic conventions of the worlds two dominant native varieties of English (British and American English) with Nigerian English, which ranks as the English worlds fastest-growing non-native variety courtesy of the unrelenting ubiquity of the Nigerian (English-language) movie industry in Africa and the Black Atlantic Diaspora. Using contemporary examples from the mass media and the authors rich experiential data, the book isolates the peculiar structural, grammatical, and stylistic characteristics of Nigerian English and shows its similarities as well as its often humorous differences with British and American English. Although Nigerian English forms the backdrop of the book, it will benefit teachers of English as a second or foreign language across the world. Similarly, because it presents complex grammatical concepts in a lucid, personal narrative style, it is useful both to a general and a specialist audience, including people who study anthropology and globalization. The true-life experiential encounters that the book uses to instantiate the differences and similarities between Nigerian English and native varieties of English will make it valuable as an empirical data mine for disciplines that investigate the movement and diffusion of linguistic codes across the bounds of nations and states in the age of globalization.

Recenzijos

«What is wonderful about Professor Kperogis book is its erudition, its no-nonsense approach, and its familiar language. In other words, the reader is in for a treat. [ F]or many of us who thought we knew what English meant, reading this book will teach us not only how language works and how English has changed, but about its speakers in Nigeria, their world, and the world of how they talk to each other. The British and American reader should emerge somewhat humbled by this process, and the Nigerian reader perhaps very satisfied over what marvels have been created in his or her own homeland.» (Extract from the Foreword by Kenneth Harrow, Distinguished Professor of English, Michigan State University, United States) «This delightful book by Farooq A. Kperogi gives a comprehensive overview of the peculiarities of the meaning and usage of words and phrases in Nigerian English. It contains numerous examples and demonstrates through comparisons with American and British English how the Nigerian variety of English has developed its own distinct vocabulary and rules of usage. Moreover, it traces general mechanisms of change in meaning and usage in these three varieties of English. Written in a highly accessible style that is at the same time entertaining and instructive, this book is a very enjoyable read for both scholars and non-linguists interested in Nigerian English and varieties of English as a whole.» (Ulrike Gut, Chair for English Linguistics, University of Münster, Germany) «Glocal English is a brilliant and provocative exploration of several intriguing dimensions in the grammar of Nigerian English, one of the Englishes fathered by British English. This new English is struggling against many unavoidable odds and influences to secure its legitimacy and respect, uncertain whether to disown the norms of an uncomfortable parent and of caregivers, but willing to be (mis)understood in the global centres of English language use. Farooq A. Kperogi provides deep and admirable insights into the slippery borders separating usage from abusage and errors of construction from terrors of construction. The book, which has emerged from his famous Politics of Grammar column, is a restless hound that must keep an eye on the game. It is impossible to ignore this book in both popular and intellectual discourses on the changing colours of English. It is highly recommended for courses in world Englishes, particularly Nigerian English.» (Obododimma Oha, Professor of Cultural Semiotics and Stylistics, Department of English, University of Ibadan, Nigeria)

Preface ix
Acknowledgments xiii
Foreword xvii
Part One Conceptual Issues in Nigerian, American, and British English
1 Conceptualizing Nigerian English
3(22)
2 Are There Native English Speakers in Nigeria?
25(10)
3 Comparing Broken English, Pidgin English, and Nigerian English
35(4)
4 American English, British English, and "Bastardization"
39(8)
5 Grammatical Dialectics and the Politics of Meaning and Usage in English
47(9)
6 Between Useless and Useful Tautologies in English
56(17)
7 The African Origins of Common English Words
73(18)
Part Two Comparisons of Nigerian, American, and British English Usage
8 Nigerianisms, Americanisms, Briticisms, and Communication Breakdown
91(5)
9 Top Hilarious Differences between American and Nigerian English
96(6)
10 Grammatical Errors Common to Americans and Nigerians
102(4)
11 Comparing the Vernaculars of American, British, and Nigerian Universities
106(6)
12 Grammar of Titles and Naming in British, American, and Nigerian English
112(9)
Part Three English Usage in the Nigerian News Media
13 The English of the Nigerian News Media
121(30)
Part Four Peculiar Expressions in Nigerian English
14 Nigerian English's Unique Telephonic Vocabularies
151(6)
15 Top Cutest and Strangest Nigerian English Idioms
157(12)
16 Back-formation and Affixation in Nigerian English
169(5)
17 Most Popular Mangled Expressions in Nigerian English
174(5)
18 Peculiar Salutations in Nigerian English
179(7)
19 Top Exclamatory Expressions in Nigerian English
186(6)
20 When Food and Grammar Mix
192(4)
21 Words Nigerians Commonly Mispronounce
196(17)
Part Five Politics and Nigerian English Usage
22 Grammar of Nigerian Politics
213(10)
Bibliography 223(8)
Index 231
Farooq A. Kperogi is Assistant Professor of Journalism in the Department of Communication at Kennesaw State University in Georgia. A former Nigerian newspaper journalist, he received his PhD in communication from Georgia State University, Atlanta, his MS in communication from the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, and his BA in mass communication from Bayero University, Kano, Nigeria. During his doctoral studies, he won the Outstanding Academic Achievement Award. He also won the Outstanding Masters Student in Communication Award at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette and the Nigerian Television Authority Prize for the Best Graduating Student in Mass Communication at Bayero University, Kano. He is published widely and blogs at www.farooqkperogi.com.