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America's Common Bond

Rs. 875

Additional information

ISBN 9788184050608
Year of Publication 2010
Binding HardBound
Pages
Edition
Language English

Cultural Pluralism and the governmental programs it has inspired, lie bilingual education and multilingual ballots, have convinced many recent immigrants that it was not necessary to learn English to become American. The result has been disastrous: such immigrants have not only failed to assimilate into the American mainstream but also refused to assimilate. Worse, they are now encouraged to change the society in which they have settled in instead of assimilating into that society. In fact, Americanization itself is now regarded "un-American", and any attempt to declare English as the official language of U.S. government is branded as an Anglo-supremacist conspiracy to undermine and eliminate minority languages and cultures.

Hundred of Limited-English-proficient students still Languish in bilingual classes. English was recently banned in a Texas border town and Spanish declared its official Language. The preservation of minority Language is now a federal responsibility. A presidential candidate who declared support for Official English lost. Another candidate, who had campaigned saying that it was more important for Americans to make their children learn Spanish than for immigrants to learn English, now sits in the Oval Office.

To prevent further calamities, English needs to be declared the official language of the United States. The Official English movement, which has succeeded in getting thirty states adopt English as their official language, is a concerted effort by mainstream Americans (not necessarily of Anglo-American descent) to reinforce America's assimilationist ideal and create an ethnically diverse but culturally united America, in line with the thinking of the Founding Father. A new model of assimilation, which rejects Cultural Pluralism as unsuitable for the American experience, is also the need of the hour.


1 The Search for the Language of America
(A) Behind language neutrality: Does constitutional silence make English official in America?
(B) E Pluribus Unum: American assimilationism in retrospect
2 The Melting Pot Boils Over
(A) Changing the face of America: The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965
(B) From immigrant to ethnics: the judicial and statutory protection of minority language rights
3 Old Ties in the New World
(A) From "Know English" to "No English": The quagmire that is bilingual education
(B) Permanently alien residents: The baneful effects of bilingual education
4 The Surge for the Language of America
(A) Preserving America's common bond: The Official English movement
(B) Toward official monolingualism: H.R. 123
5 Nation versus Hyphenation
(A) A more perfect union: Official English Laws in the States
(B) From immigrants to Americans: the GOP and the Politics of Inclusion
6 A Nation of Immigrants, Not A Multilingual Boarding House
(A) Amero-conformity: Towards a New Theory of Assimilation
(B) One Culture, One Common Language: Official English and the Future of Assimilation
7 Postscript H.R. 4321
8 Suggested Readings
Index

SAUMYAJIT RAY, PhD in American Studies (Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi India) was a University Grants Commission Senior Research Fellow during his doctoral days. He has taught Political Science for years to undergraduate students of the University of Calcutta (Calcutta, now Kolkata) and Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University (Delhi).
He has contributed journal articles and book chapters on multiculturalism, terrorism, U.S. politics, and U.S.-India relations.