Soap operas spur linguistic democracy in South Africa
February 12th, 2011 - 4:48 pm ICT by IANSCape Town (South Africa), Feb 12 (IANS) Soap operas in South Africa have helped eliminate linguistic boundaries between English and 11 other languages adopted at the end of apartheid.The writers of the South African Constitution probably did not imagine soap operas as a way to achieve linguistic democracy, but they are practicing just that, the Christian Science Monitor reported.
Television came to South Africa in 1976, with English and Afrikaans dominating programming throughout the apartheid era. With democracy in the 1990s came a new constitution that named 11 official languages, as well as a mandate for the state to “elevate the status and advance the use of these languages.”
Zarina Ebrahim, a Durban housewife, watches “7de Laan” (”Seventh Avenue”), a soap opera in Afrikaans sprinkled with English and Zulu dialogue and with English subtitles.
English is her first language, but she studied Afrikaans at school and understands some Zulu. On “7de Laan,” characters will greet each other in Afrikaans, discuss a problem in Zulu, and then make a joke in English, all in one scene.
“It’s so normal - that’s more or less the way we communicate in real life,” says Ebrahim.
Switching languages in the course of a conversation is how urban dwellers learn to “meet each other halfway”, says Johannesburg-based language consultant Sarah Slabbert. “We can identify better with (multilingual) characters than if they were speaking only one language. We can work together; we can live together.”
The indigenous programmes are culturally relevant, too, situated in places like Johannesburg or rural mining towns and featuring guest appearances by local celebrities.
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