Abstract

In this paper, we discuss the tacit agreement to use English as lingua franca in global academia. Our interest is in how Anglocentrism manifests within academic practices – seminars, conferences, and academic publishing – all of which are marked by neoliberal assumptions of mastery, quality, and efficacy. Drawing on autobiographical narratives, social media conversations, and literature, as well as recent discussions on conferencing and peer review practices, we analyse how historically shaped linguistic privilege and linguistic divides continue to be lived at the level of the body, affects and affective atmospheres. Language is not just language, rather, seemingly practical decisions about language always involve the aspects of material labour, time, money, and careers: they shape researcher subjectivities and entire domains of scientific knowledge. However, we also highlight the potentials nested in the emergence of minor language and the deterritorialising forces of humor. Articulating the speculative lines of what if, we propose more care-full academic linguistic practices.

Highlights

  • Finnish language is my window and my house I inhabit this language

  • In today’s global academia, the tacit agreement is to use English language in practically all communication manifesting in conferences, international networks and academic publications

  • We are two early career researchers who have come to realize how Anglocentrism works as a difference between us – one coming from a small linguistic minority globally (Finnish1), and the other a native English speaker born in Canada

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Summary

Introduction

Finnish language is my window and my house I inhabit this language. It is my skin. (Pentti Saarikoski, cited in Berner, 1986, p. 70). The perspective of affects and atmospheres situates the politics of academic practices in place and time, offering new sensitivities towards the ways materials and discourses create force fields in situations, enabling some thing or some body to become capacious while preventing other capabilities to become (Clough, 2007; Truman, 2021).

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