Sunday, March 10, 2019
Language and Intimacy
Kanye East 03/15/2013 English Language and nearness Language defines the type of person we are. It has an tinct on our choices as rise as our lifestyle. Depending on friends, family, and others we talk to, our choice on language tends to vary. Our decisions in life, sometimes, are influenced by the language we use and our surroundings. Language has become a way of seeing life in a different perspective. notwithstanding can language effect intimacy? Family intimacy to be exact. Richard Rodriguez, a writer and public speaker, expertly illustrates his own experience with this in his autobiography, aridity of Memory.Rodriguezs childhood was particularly unique given the fact that bit he was born and raised in the United States, he was potently influenced in the ethnic environment of a Spanish family. Although the reader is introduced to whole a short excerpt from the autobiography, he learns a great get along about Rodriguezs family and his relationship to it, his conflict of sp eaking English versus Spanish, and the conundrum that became evident as he used English as his primary winding language. Since learning English, young Rodriguez noted the lack of intimacy there was in his home.Did the understanding of a new language affect the very coating family? While I read this autobiography, there were tons of images that struck me. It was very interesting because so many of the different parts could relate to my life. cosmos born and raised in America, English was automatic eachy my first language. Nevertheless, my parents were deplore on making me and my siblings learn their native tongue, my fathers Yemeni culture and my mothers Turkish culture and most importantly, our religion. As soon as they can, my parents enrolled me and my siblings in Arabic school and Islamic studies.There we learned how to read, write and fluently speak Arabic and also memorize and study the Holy Quran. At home, my mother schooled us on the Turkish language. The essence of my childhood was of culture and language just now as me and my siblings got older, the language faded. Our once perfectly spoken Turkish and Arabic, broken. I couldnt deny the fact that my Arabic was not as self-coloured as before but it became the most evident to me when my grandparents came oer from overseas. They entirely came one time before, when I was younger and knew the language of their tongue.The news of them approach path to our house from Yemen brought me to the basement, going through stacks of old coloring watchwords and photos desperately looking for my old Arabic books. Remembering the pages and pages of Arabic greetings and phrases, I looked sluice harder. After finally finding it at the bottom and a private stack of books, I sat. The rush of nostalgia came back but when I unfastened my mouth to read, it was a stuttered mess. The words I once read so fluently were now what seemed a calligraphy of memory. At this point, I knew the book wasnt going to do much for me.Practicing the phrases I already knew, and tell occasionally, I found more and more ways to make them start like their not all I know. Ignoring the fact that they were. The day came and by this point I wanted to get the humiliation and disappointment over with. As I walked downstairs to greet them, familiar voices and smells of incents filled the air. Their smiles and hugs erased all the worry. And as we sat there listening to them laugh and reminisce with my father, me and my siblings all joined in on the conversation.With the language of intimacy. This autobiography triggered many thoughts on language and intimacy. Of all possible human qualities, the one that wields the most supply is the ability to use, understand and communicate effectively through language. A honorable use of language allows us to clearly communicate an exact idea from one person to another person or group of people. This distinct science of being able to convey exactly what you want equates to th e learnedness of power. As strong and powerful as language is, It didnt affect intimacy.
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