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English in Finland: globalisation, language awareness and questions of identity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 January 2004

IRMA TAAVITSAINEN
Affiliation:
Professor of English Philology and Head of the Department of English at the University of Helsinki
PÄIVI PAHTA
Affiliation:
Research Fellow in the multidisciplinary Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies at the University of Helsinki

Extract

THIS ARTICLE discusses present trends in the use of English in Finland, paying attention to the specific sociohistorical character of the country with its long history of Finnish-Swedish bilingualism. It has been argued that the other Nordic countries are developing from EFL to ESL countries; is Finland heading the same way? If so, at what stage is the process? We shall first give a brief overview of the theoretical background and of the historical development of the language situation in Finland. The present state of the use of English is outlined next, with the focus on education and on areas where the danger of domain loss is most imminent. At the end we discuss the ongoing changes in terms of the identity-forming function of language and the present diffusion in which the national language does not necessarily play a traditional role.

Type
Original Article
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2003

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