Domination of English and its impact on the Arabic System of Scholarly Communication

While English, supported by technological development and the advent of networked information, has overwhelmingly played a dominating force in the world–wide system of scholarly communication, it has created a deficiency in local scholarly communication systems; the Arabic scholarly communication sy...

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Main Author: Ali Saif Al-Aufi
Format: Article
Language:Arabic
Published: Sultan Qaboos University 2012-01-01
Series:Journal of Arts and Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.squ.edu.om/index.php/jass/article/view/1046
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spelling doaj-04a2799e8f634dfd8f7ed5c0a7a3f1512020-11-25T00:40:38ZaraSultan Qaboos UniversityJournal of Arts and Social Sciences2312-12702522-22792012-01-013152810.24200/jass.vol3iss1pp5-28995Domination of English and its impact on the Arabic System of Scholarly CommunicationAli Saif Al-Aufi0Sultan Qaboos University College of Arts & Social Sciences Department of Information StudiesWhile English, supported by technological development and the advent of networked information, has overwhelmingly played a dominating force in the world–wide system of scholarly communication, it has created a deficiency in local scholarly communication systems; the Arabic scholarly communication system is no exception. This paper investigates the impact of English language on the Arab academics’ practices in and attitudes towards research and scholarly communication. It also assesses the challenges facing the future of Arabic scholarship, in particular the crisis regarding the use of the Arabic language in the academic networked environment. A qualitative approach containing semi-structured interviews was utilized to collect rich data about the academics’ practices and attitudes on their choice of language for research and scholarly communication and whether the dominant use of English, especially in science disciplines, hinders the potential of Arabic scholarship to contribute in the development of Arabic as a scholarly language.https://journals.squ.edu.om/index.php/jass/article/view/1046Scholarly communication, Networked Information, linguistic divide, Arabic language, Arab World, Sultan Qaboos University, Oman
collection DOAJ
language Arabic
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ali Saif Al-Aufi
spellingShingle Ali Saif Al-Aufi
Domination of English and its impact on the Arabic System of Scholarly Communication
Journal of Arts and Social Sciences
Scholarly communication, Networked Information, linguistic divide, Arabic language, Arab World, Sultan Qaboos University, Oman
author_facet Ali Saif Al-Aufi
author_sort Ali Saif Al-Aufi
title Domination of English and its impact on the Arabic System of Scholarly Communication
title_short Domination of English and its impact on the Arabic System of Scholarly Communication
title_full Domination of English and its impact on the Arabic System of Scholarly Communication
title_fullStr Domination of English and its impact on the Arabic System of Scholarly Communication
title_full_unstemmed Domination of English and its impact on the Arabic System of Scholarly Communication
title_sort domination of english and its impact on the arabic system of scholarly communication
publisher Sultan Qaboos University
series Journal of Arts and Social Sciences
issn 2312-1270
2522-2279
publishDate 2012-01-01
description While English, supported by technological development and the advent of networked information, has overwhelmingly played a dominating force in the world–wide system of scholarly communication, it has created a deficiency in local scholarly communication systems; the Arabic scholarly communication system is no exception. This paper investigates the impact of English language on the Arab academics’ practices in and attitudes towards research and scholarly communication. It also assesses the challenges facing the future of Arabic scholarship, in particular the crisis regarding the use of the Arabic language in the academic networked environment. A qualitative approach containing semi-structured interviews was utilized to collect rich data about the academics’ practices and attitudes on their choice of language for research and scholarly communication and whether the dominant use of English, especially in science disciplines, hinders the potential of Arabic scholarship to contribute in the development of Arabic as a scholarly language.
topic Scholarly communication, Networked Information, linguistic divide, Arabic language, Arab World, Sultan Qaboos University, Oman
url https://journals.squ.edu.om/index.php/jass/article/view/1046
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