My Anthem

Sunday, January 21, 2007

Why Remain a Banana Chinese?

SUNDAE INTER:LUDE

I must plead ignorance that when someone called another Chinese "You are a real banana -- yellow on the outside, white on the inside", it was usually a derogatory attack. Yes, one Chinoserie looking down on the Other because the Other only looked Chinese extrernally, but inside... Yes, the Banana spoke not the Chinese language. Knew little C culture, can't quote one line from Li Bai's pomes... (Unlike AM and Desi-lah!) What a blardy disgrace! (That's not Desi's opinion, I'm just reporting, okay, doing you a public service hear!)

My ignorance was dismissed just less than two years ago when one of my Esteemed Readers lamented she "was a banana, poor Me!" and then Desi realised a new term that had been around umpteen years among the teen crowd. Now you know I am no longer a teenager, but how about Tween? (aweOfHelen will explain to thee patiently, bye her 2007freelunch in eeeehPOH!)

I urge my fellow Malaysians of all ethnic origins, especially those with the "original" Chinese blood, to learn Mandarin -- the standard Chinese language that transcends all dialect groups, whether you are in mainland China or an overseas Chinoserie like Desi.

With a globalised world, you don't have a choice but to master an extra language if ytou know the trend -- mainland China just chalked up a new record last October, attaining foreign reserves of more than USD1 trillion! And its GDP is still roaring at 10% per annum. Your destination if you're lucky to land a job with an MNC could be Beijing or Shanghai on Kunming, China!

More on the subject to convince you, and it did not come from Desi with any loaded interest. Neither am I loaded in other ways except by gravitational pull, both vertically and equatorially. Don't laugh at my expanse. I know many of you (confess-lah, it's not a crime!) also ENJOY con BF, freelunch, freedinner and Lustsupper.



Mandarin learning soars outside China

Posted: 09:44 Jan-11-2007 Filed under: Foreign, Education

Story from BBC NEWS, Jan 9.2007

In just five years, the number of non-Chinese people learning Mandarin Chinese has soared to 30 million. What is fuelling this expansion, and will it change the status of English as a global language?

Shanghai-born lawyer Kailan Shu Lucas of Chinese Learning Centre organises lessons in Mandarin, the main Chinese language, for pupils in London - and she is very busy.

She now co-ordinates lessons for 12 London schools. She believes that in most cases, having their children study the language is a career calculation made by the parents.

“Parents nowadays think that in 10-20 years’ time, when their children are in adulthood, China will be even bigger - and so learning Chinese will be a very helpful tool,” she told BBC World Service’s Analysis programme.

“This will be a very useful, important language to learn.”


In London, the parents of most of the non-Chinese students studying Mandarin Chinese are from the finance industry.

“That influences the parents’ thoughts,” she added.

“They want their children to learn Chinese and be more versatile in terms of job prospects in the future.”

The belief is that China is not just a new rival, but a new provider, not just a UK phenomenon - in the US too, numbers of teenagers taking Chinese have rocketed.


In 1998, just 6,000 student enrolled in Mandarin programmes. That figure is now 50,000.

“Students want to sign up for it; parents are asking for it; communities are asking for it,” said Brett Lovejoy, of the American Council for the Teaching of Foreign Languages.

“It’s self-evident that children will be much better off economically and in job seeking if Chinese programmes are adopted.”

In the UK, the number of students at colleges and universities taking Chinese as their main subject doubled between 2002 and 2005. Similar increases are reported in most Western nations.

This has not happened without encouragement from Beijing, where the government is actively promoting the speaking of Mandarin abroad.

Hundreds of teachers have been sent to Africa, and since 2004, China has set up “Confucius Institutes” around the world, actively promoting Mandarin Chinese.

So far, they have signed contracts with 40 universities in 25 countries to establish these joint projects. Global language

And professor David Crystal, a leading authority on how languages work and how they change, explained that the explosion in the numbers learning Chinese is also down to demographic influences at home.

“In modern times, as cultures have changed - especially in Britain, the United States and Australia - as the countries have become increasingly multi-cultural and multi-ethnic, then the languages that come with those groups of immigrants become an increasingly important part of the culture,” he said.

“London is one of the multi-lingual centres of the world… the monolingual tradition of English in the past is changing very much, and I think Chinese is one of the important factors.

“People who used to be able to make their way in the world as monolingual English speakers are now finding that they’ve got to compete with people who are genuinely multilingual.”

Despite the big increase, most analysts agree Chinese is not about to replace English as the “global language” in the immediate future.

But professor Crystal added that this may not always be the case.

“It all depends on the power of the people who speak it - especially their economic power,” said professor Crystal.

“A thousand years ago, people would have said it would be absurd that Latin would not be spoken in 1,000 years’ time. But we know that has happened. It can only take 100 years or so for the language balance of power to shift.

“Money talks. Currently, the language money talks is the dollar. But it might not always be that way.”

Kailan said that in this industry, China is “a big thing.”

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Desi, I think language is only small part of it. IMHO, the most serious problem of are the cultural focal point. Most of English speaking people think they are part of English speaking world, e.g. UK, US, beside fast food,movies, news, etc "globalisation culture", none of the English speaking culture has are associate with the land.

I am not talking about universal values such as human rights, speech freedom; but cultural/localise view. For example, many view Taiwan parliament fighting as immature (using the western point of view). But when you look at western democracy process, you will notice revolution, wars, bloodshed that no different than the parliament fighting. Alas, the Taiwan fighting is consider "civilise" compare the western democracy revolution process . But why many people fail to see it?

William Smith said...

I am also learning Chinese by a special and innovative service in Beijing Chinese School. I like to learn in live class with teachers from Beijing directly. I also like to practice Chinese with volunteers freely everyday. Watching Chinese learning TV on CLTV is also interesting and helpful to practice listening and learn more about Chinese culture.