1st Edition

Language as Statecraft 'Global English' and the Politics of Language in Rwanda

By Kate Spowage Copyright 2024
    240 Pages 4 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book examines the rise of English in Rwanda, offering critical insights into the links between language, colonialism, and capitalism, with implications for our understanding of global English.

    Spowage takes an interdisciplinary approach, drawing on political theory, cultural-materialism, and critical sociolinguistics. She positions language policy as an instrument for social reproduction and exploitation, but also a site of struggle and contest. Unravelling the complex history of language politics and policy in Rwanda, Spowage elaborates a theory of language as statecraft. This approach draws attention to the endurance of a colonial capitalist link between language and social class, while illuminating the specific power of English in legitimising neoliberal political power and class hierarchies. On this basis, Spowage argues for a theoretical reimagining of the spread of English through the ‘global English nébuleuse’, a model which aims to capture the complex mechanisms that reinforce the dominance of English and to identify points where those mechanisms are fragile.

    This innovative volume will be of interest to scholars in sociolinguistics, global Englishes, language and politics, and African studies.

    Contents

     

    Acknowledgements

     

    Introduction: Rwanda and the ‘Global English’ Debate

     

    Chapter One: Language and Statecraft

     

    Chapter Two: Language and Hegemony in ‘Francophone’ Rwanda

     

    Chapter Three: The RPF and the Struggle for ‘Anglophone’ Hegemony

     

    Chapter Four: English, Prosperity, and Statecraft in Neoliberal Rwanda

     

    Chapter Five: In Theory: Hegemony and Resistance, Rwanda and the World

     

    References

     

    Index

     

    Biography

    Kate Spowage is Lecturer in English Language at the School of English at the University of Leeds, UK. Her research centres on the politics of language.