SELF-ABSORBED AMERICANS NEED TO BROADEN HORIZONS
I’ve been thinking a lot about language lately. Two of the movies I saw over the long weekend rely on language and cultural differences to make their point. In both films, the scriptwriters count on Americans to be well-meaning but ignorant.
As probably everyone knows by now, “Borat” stars a Jewish comedian posing as a Kazakh reporter. Relying on American naiveté, he pushes his character as far as he can go to see how the audience will react. He relies on American ignorance of other cultures to get away with being a “foreigner”. In fact, his Kazakhstani ranting is mostly Hebrew with a smattering of Polish. But he knows no American audience will catch that.
(Some have raised concerns that “Borat” is anti-semitic. Speaking personally, as a Jew I can confidently state that the film is viciously and horribly funny. But if you’ve got a friend who’s seen it, ask them if they think you’d like it. To paraphrase one reviewer on these pages, Borat is not everyone’s cup of borscht.)
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Stop me if you’ve heard this one:
“What do you call someone who speaks three languages?” “Trilingual.”
“What do you call someone who speaks two languages?” “Bilingual.”
“What do you call someone who speaks one language?” “American.”
I first heard that in
I’m of two minds on American’s lack of language skills. On the one hand, a single language means a unified country. It’s absolutely essential to national cohesion and a common American culture.
And yet, as the world’s only superpower and economic
powerhouse, our ignorance of other cultures is our greatest weakness. In a time of tension in the
I was thinking more about language a couple of nights ago
while lying in bed, listening to rock and roll from the other side of the
world.
As I was drifting off to sleep, I heard a song called “Born
in the
Translating Russian to English is tricky, but the last verse of the song goes something like:
“What will hope return to us?
What can beauty call its own?
Yesterday, a Lord of Empire,
Now an orphan, all alone.”
Can you imagine what life is like in a country where that is on the top of the charts?
If you are even willing to try, that’s progress. Now keep that energy going. Go see a foreign film. Take a trip somewhere interesting, but learn a few words in the local dialect first. Make a friend or two while you’re there.
Better still, set up a home exchange with a family from another country. I did this a few years ago, it’s what the internet was made for. Got a kid in college? Think about a semester abroad. At most schools, it doesn’t cost that much.
Maybe travel isn’t in the cards for you. If so, talk to an immigrant you know. Read books by foreign writers and journalists who know their stuff.
Nobody’s asking you to speak Italian like Dante, or use your
high school French to impress passersby on the
Champs-Élysées. Just make
an effort to learn a little more about someplace else, to overcome the happy
accidents of geography that are both