It might seem as if globalization is making the whole world speak
English. But spend time in any major city and you are likely to
encounter a cornucopia of languages. Even monolingual people have
different ways of speaking to their bosses or teachers, their intimate
friends or their pets. And if you live in India or Nigeria, you might
use five different languages during a typical day.
Katrin Kohl makes a passionate case for why we must embrace languages in
all their diversity. When you study a language, you open a unique
doorway into the world, immerse yourself in a different way of seeing,
and discover new ways of communicating with people from different
cultures on their terms. Kohl argues that language diversity is of vital
importance to human societies, sustaining the complexity of human
nature, culture and technology. We should care about preserving it as
much as we care about preserving the diversity of our biological world.