[Air-l] Hungarian and others
Cristian Berrío Zapata
cristianberrioz at hotmail.com
Thu Oct 7 06:32:04 PDT 2004
I agree with Jarek although my two languages (Spanish and English) have
wide spread. The situation of Anglicization of the web had made of it a
power instrument of de-culturization.
Whether you learn English (I do adore Shakespeare language but this has
nothing to do regarding this) or you abandon the web. Same case if we
view all cultural and socioeconomic "intended" messages in the content,
which for obvious is representative of our west-cultural point of view.
Power and the web is a must at any discussion...
Cristian Berrío Zapata
Profesor PUJ - UNAL
Facultad de Economía
Teléfono (57 3)300 817 9849
cberrioz at cable.net.co
CHAT cristianberrioz at hotmail.com
-----Mensaje original-----
De: air-l-aoir.org-bounces at listserv.aoir.org
[mailto:air-l-aoir.org-bounces at listserv.aoir.org] En nombre de J. J.
Enviado el: Martes, 05 de Octubre de 2004 10:31 a.m.
Para: air-l at listserv.aoir.org
Asunto: [Air-l] Hungarian and others
About 10% of the world's population has access to the Internet but 97%
of
web sites are designed in English. If you need reference for these
statistics let me know but unless we recognize the importance and
validity
of other languages in cyberspace, we can find ourselves on the receiving
end
of the global spectrum.
If anything, we should encourage research and scholarly contribution in
other, lesser known (to the English-speaking world) languages.
Jarek
Santiago Canyon College
Orange, California
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