New Philosopher

Language shapes us

I remember those first weeks sitting around the lunch table with my adopted Cusceñan Peruvian family: José, Emma, and their four daughters. Unfamiliar sounds ricocheted back and forth, blasting holes in my self-confidence and bringing on an existential crisis of epic proportions. If I couldn’t wax lyrical about the state of the world, if I couldn’t tell a joke, if I couldn’t even have a basic conversation about anything, then who was I?

I’d arrived in Peru on a mission to learn Spanish. I’d been teaching English to migrants and refugees, and I imagined that learning a language through cultural immersion would make me a better teacher. I wanted to experience what my students experienced and so I arrived in Peru with only one (not particularly useful) phrase of Spanish, learned while marching the streets of Sydney chanting for El Salvadorean freedom: “The people united, will never be

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from New Philosopher

New Philosopher6 min read
Reverse The Flow
In 1600, as Shakespeare worked on his great tragedies, the Mughal Empire, stretching across modern South Asia, was arguably the wealthiest place in the world. It produced about a quarter of the world’s manufactured goods and dominated the global text
New Philosopher1 min read
The Waste Land
What is that sound high in the airMurmur of maternal lamentationWho are those hooded hordes swarmingOver endless plains, stumbling in cracked earthRinged by the flat horizon onlyWhat is the city over the mountainsCracks and reforms and bursts in the
New Philosopher4 min read
First Among Equals
Few things divide families so much as an unequal skew of wealth among its different members. Whether caused by a divisive matriarch or patriarch leaving everything to a favoured child, while snubbing the rest, or by one family member striking out to

Related Books & Audiobooks