Lesson 1.1
Lesson 1 - My Language and My Identity
Lesson 1—My Language and My Identity
How does my language reflect who I am?
Language can connect people with friends and family. When you communicate in a language you share, you can feel included and part of a group. It can define who you are. Think about the language you speak. Do you speak several languages? What does the language you speak say about who you are? Are there words you use that identify where you are from? Your age? Your interests?
You may have words and names you use that are unique to your family and friends. You may also find that much of your language is made up of vocabulary used elsewhere in the world. This may be due to globalization. Language, like many other products and trends, can travel beyond borders in a globalizing world. This can have a uniting impact when people are able to understand and communicate in the same language. It can also alter identities and affect the languages people speak. For many Canadians, language is an expression of their identity. The loss of their unique language can lead to the eventual loss of their unique culture and identity.
Language can be more than just communication between people. It communicates who they are.
What is my language?
How does my language reflect who I am? Throughout this lesson, think if language is used to reflect your identity, both individual and collective. Does it connect you to your community and your world? Will increased global contact change your language and who you are?
Key Terms
collective: related to members of a group that share common characteristics such as language, culture, and identity
community: a group that shares a connection to the same region or the land
Read
Pages 26 to 38 in Perspectives on Globalization.Â
Multimedia
Click HERE for more information about language in Canada. - note - you do not have to submit anything here.
Assignment
Please complete your Does Globalization Impact Language? Assignment assignment.Â
Lesson Summary
Does your language say who you are? In this lesson you recognized that for many people, language is their identity. It shares views and understandings of the world. It connects you to your community. It transmits knowledge and culture. Your language is not immune from the impact of globalization. Globalization can allow you to communicate globally with others who share your language, or it can erode the uniqueness and the sustainability of your language. This can change who you are and your culture. For many Aboriginal and Francophone people in Canada, without their unique language, it affects how they live their lives and their quality of life.
Understanding this related issue can help you respond to the module question: To what extent should globalization shape identity?