Diversity management and the presumptive universality of categories : the case of the Indians in Singapore
Increasing societal and linguistic diversity poses significant challenges to formative categories of language policies. We make this point via an examination of Singapore's management of its most linguistically diverse ethnic group, the Indians. While heterogeneity has always been Singapore’s d...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1371732020-03-04T08:00:11Z Diversity management and the presumptive universality of categories : the case of the Indians in Singapore Jain, Ritu Wee, Lionel School of Humanities Language and Communication Centre Social sciences::Sociology::Communities, classes and races Linguistic Categories Decolonial Perspective Increasing societal and linguistic diversity poses significant challenges to formative categories of language policies. We make this point via an examination of Singapore's management of its most linguistically diverse ethnic group, the Indians. While heterogeneity has always been Singapore’s defining feature, the nature and scale of recent immigration have resulted in an unprecedented societal complexity. The government’s appreciation of this complexity among the Indians has led to a relaxation of the education policy by which five other Indian languages (Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Punjabi, Urdu) serve as possible alternatives to Tamil (the officially assigned ethnic mother tongue). However, speakers from these other Indian language communities often prefer Hindi over alternatives. The growing prominence of Hindi illustrates that progressive policies can nonetheless be subverted by the very groups they seek to empower. We analyze this policy predicament, tracing the roots of Singapore’s language policy to categories inherited from British colonialism. Consequently, contemporary tweaks to the policy leave unchallenged the presumptive universality of these categories. Calling for consistent attention to the situatedness and provenance of all categories (northern as well as southern), we close our paper with a description of what Singapore’s language policy vis-à-vis the Indian communities would look like from a decolonial perspective. Accepted version 2020-03-04T08:00:11Z 2020-03-04T08:00:11Z 2018 Journal Article Jain, R., & Wee, L. (2019). Diversity management and the presumptive universality of categories : the case of the Indians in Singapore. Current Issues in Language Planning, 20(1), 16-32. doi:10.1080/14664208.2018.1503386 1466-4208 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137173 10.1080/14664208.2018.1503386 2-s2.0-85052157959 1 20 16 32 en Current Issues in Language Planning This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Current Issues in Language Planning on 15 Aug 2018, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/14664208.2018.1503386. application/pdf |
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Social sciences::Sociology::Communities, classes and races Linguistic Categories Decolonial Perspective Jain, Ritu Wee, Lionel Diversity management and the presumptive universality of categories : the case of the Indians in Singapore |
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Increasing societal and linguistic diversity poses significant challenges to formative categories of language policies. We make this point via an examination of Singapore's management of its most linguistically diverse ethnic group, the Indians. While heterogeneity has always been Singapore’s defining feature, the nature and scale of recent immigration have resulted in an unprecedented societal complexity. The government’s appreciation of this complexity among the Indians has led to a relaxation of the education policy by which five other Indian languages (Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Punjabi, Urdu) serve as possible alternatives to Tamil (the officially assigned ethnic mother tongue). However, speakers from these other Indian language communities often prefer Hindi over alternatives. The growing prominence of Hindi illustrates that progressive policies can nonetheless be subverted by the very groups they seek to empower. We analyze this policy predicament, tracing the roots of Singapore’s language policy to categories inherited from British colonialism. Consequently, contemporary tweaks to the policy leave unchallenged the presumptive universality of these categories. Calling for consistent attention to the situatedness and provenance of all categories (northern as well as southern), we close our paper with a description of what Singapore’s language policy vis-à-vis the Indian communities would look like from a decolonial perspective. |
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School of Humanities |
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School of Humanities Jain, Ritu Wee, Lionel |
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Article |
author |
Jain, Ritu Wee, Lionel |
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Jain, Ritu |
title |
Diversity management and the presumptive universality of categories : the case of the Indians in Singapore |
title_short |
Diversity management and the presumptive universality of categories : the case of the Indians in Singapore |
title_full |
Diversity management and the presumptive universality of categories : the case of the Indians in Singapore |
title_fullStr |
Diversity management and the presumptive universality of categories : the case of the Indians in Singapore |
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Diversity management and the presumptive universality of categories : the case of the Indians in Singapore |
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diversity management and the presumptive universality of categories : the case of the indians in singapore |
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2020 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137173 |
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1681037076584202240 |