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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Tuesday, February 13, 2001 |
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World Three
IF WE discuss in terms of the total content of the world's
cultural heritage including literacy and social traditions and
conventions, etc., we will notice that the non-literate societies
transmit them through direct imitation of the elders by the young
ones. But there are lots of problems in it. The most significant
of those is that the transmission through speech is very much
susceptible to changes and errors and it cannot be preserved
accurately for a long period of time. For example, in order to
recite the Vedas correctly the pratishakhyas were created; but
even then they can be heard with strong regional characteristics
in different parts of India.
Because of its changing nature, the spoken language gets low
priority in comparison with the written language from the legal
point of view because law attaches precedence and weight to
written forms. A simple example here will drive home the point.
The law is not at all concerned as to how a person pronounces
his/her name, but if there is a change in its spelling objections
are raised. For these reasons, writing is considered public and
official when speech is not. This is why J. Goody and I. Watt
have remarked that ``... the most significant elements of any
human culture are channelled through words...'' Here, of course,
it is necessary to discuss how children's knowledge of the
concept `word' is not a fixed one and on the contrary, it evolves
over a period of time and gets crystallised as a result of
learning to read and write. A number of scholars have
demonstrated it in their research reports.
Visual strategies
L. S. Vygotsky has made a distinction between everyday concepts
which are acquired spontaneously and in an unconscious and
unsystematic manner and the scientific concepts which are a
result of literacy. Using this distinction, the German scholars
F. Januschek, W. Paprotte and W. Rhode have argued that pre-
school children understand the meaning of `word' in its everyday
sense. Not only that, they have shown that kindergarten children
refer to attributes of the detonated objects when asked to say
why certain words are long or short. For example, Schrien
`crying', according to those children, is a short word as
`Children are not allowed to cry for a long time'. After a
detailed discussion of many such cases, Januschek et al. (ibid.)
have suggested that formal teaching of reading and writing
transforms and restricts the broad functional core of the concept
of `word' in school-going children and literate people are
predominantly oriented to visual strategies.
Chronological priority
Keeping such cases in view, Michael Stubbs has stated that though
there is chronological priority for the spoken language, the
written language has social priority. It is reflected in the
opinion of the literate societies all over the world that it is
the written language which is authentic and the spoken language
is a corrupt variety of that. Again, Stubbs has made it clear
that ``... in education it is often people's beliefs,
perceptions, attitudes and prejudices which are crucial, however
false they may be on objective grounds.'' That's why D. P.
Pattanayak says that ``In the popular mind writing is endowed
with magical power. This has led to the belief that script is the
soul of a language.'' The literate people command respect
everywhere because they can read and write which lead them to
think more objectively and critically analyse everything. There
is an old Sanskrit saying which states it clearly: A king is
worshipped in his own country; but a learned man is worshipped
everywhere.
In another experiment, J. Downing, L. Ollila and P. Oliver have
compared Indian children with non-Indian children in kindergarten
classes in Canada. They have used the Technical Language of
Literacy Test that investigates the concepts like `letter',
`sentence', etc. which belong to the written language. The
subjects of this experiment were asked to circle the item chosen
by the experimenter and it was found that the Indian children
were immature with reference to their development of featural
concepts in comparison with the non-Indian group.
The same researchers conducted another test involving 787
kindergarteners from different schools in a western Canadian city
that revealed a strong bond between the level of understanding of
such feature concepts and socio-economic class. It showed that
children coming from the higher socio-economic level performed
better than those belonging to the lower socio-economic level.
Both these tests clearly indicate that due to pre-school exposure
of the non-Indian and higher socio-economic group children to
reading and writing skills they had better cognitive advantages
and these helped them to perform better than others.
Since we are discussing cognitive advantages, it must be pointed
out here that those people who know to read and write possess new
intellectual resources which facilitate thoughts in a big way. It
is not our purpose here to underestimate the intellectual
achievements of pre- and non-literate peoples; but we want to
emphasise that literacy skills have brought about a sea change on
this scene.
`Wandering encyclopaedias'
Because of the acquisition of literacy skills, exact records of
various discoveries, inventions, and epoch making events, etc.,
could be kept and were handed over from one generation to another
in an unchanged form whereas due to social amnesia in the pre-
literate period people had to begin either from the scratch every
time or from whatever they could acquire from the ascending
generation. Thus, just at one stroke writing could overcome the
limitations the pre-literate societies had to live with and it
led to the birth of history, science and mathematics in the true
sense of the terms. For this reason Friedrich W. Nietzsche has
termed the modern people of the literate society as ``wandering
encyclopaedias''.
Karl Popper has proposed the theory of World Three while
referring to written language in particular. He has used the term
World One for the objective world that consists of material
things and World Two for the subjective world that consists of
mental states and consciousness. According to him, World Three
consists of objective knowledge which is nothing but that which
exists independently of the subjective experience of a person in
books and libraries.
So he has argued that it is written language that fosters a
critical attitude towards various statements and theories
inherited from the earlier generations. In his own words he says,
``Instead of growing better memories and brains, we grow paper,
pens, pencils, typewriters, dictaphones, the printing press and
libraries''. Similarly, J. Goody and I. Watt while citing the
example of the Greek world state that the non-literate people not
only fail to notice the inconsistencies in their traditions,
customs and beliefs, but also either adjust or forget them.
PANCHANAN MOHANTY
Professor, the Centre for Applied
Linguistics & Translation Studies,
University of Hyderabad.
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