In the Philippines, state policies for economic development focus on two things: attracting foreign investors to set up export-oriented manufacturing and business-process outsourcing industries or supporting the already well-established structures that encourage Filipino workers to find jobs abroad. These three industries have a great impact on Filipino women as it is mostly women who are employed in minimum-wage jobs at manufacturing firms or who are sent abroad as domestic helpers or “entertainers.” With such policies – which rely on foreign investors and employers needing a cheap but trainable labor force – English becomes a necessary skill for Filipino women. Following Bourdieu’s concept of the “structured systems of sociologically pertinent linguistic differences” corresponding to “an equally structured system of social difference,” it is not surprising that Philippine English displays characteristics of this structured system of social difference. This is most evident in a study done in 1995 by Ma. Lourdes Bautista that described three sub-varieties of Philippine English as yaya (nanny) English, bargirl English, and colegiala (Catholic schoolgirl) English. What is immediately striking about this template is both the inscription of the labor-export economy into, and the feminization of, Philippine English. This study examines the relations between language, power, and the new, postmodern, global, economic order of which English is both a catalyst and an offshoot. It will attempt to determine how the relations between the linguistic standard and the sub-varieties correspond to the link between patriarchal state/global capital and the most marginalized groups within that order.
Bolton, Kingsley, Priscilla T. Cruz & Isabel Pefianco Martin
2024. Research bibliography for Philippine English (2008–2023). World Englishes
Valdez, Paolo Nino & Raymund Vitorio
2024. Philippine English and commodity formation. World Englishes
Gonçalves, Kellie & Anne Schluter
2020. Introduction: Language, inequality and global care work. International Journal of the Sociology of Language 2020:262 ► pp. 1 ff.
Pennycook, Alastair
2020. Translingual entanglements of English. World Englishes 39:2 ► pp. 222 ff.
Tupas, Ruanni
2019. Entanglements of colonialism, social class, andUnequal Englishes. Journal of Sociolinguistics 23:5 ► pp. 529 ff.
Tupas, Ruanni & Aileen Salonga
2016. Unequal Englishes in the Philippines. Journal of Sociolinguistics 20:3 ► pp. 367 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 29 september 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
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