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A comparative analysis of English Language Use by creatives in two countries in sub-Saharan Africa in 2023, by Bridgette James.

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Writer's pictureGary W. Bryant

Uncovering the Importance of Writing: Insights from Author Gary Bryant

Updated: 8 hours ago

I suppose individual writers would offer various reasons for why they must write. I have my own.

Characters and their stories have constantly churned in my brain since elementary school, living their lives and creating their story paths inside my head.

 

My cousin and I created elaborate stories that we turned into movies using an 8MM camera until we went our separate ways to college. We chose separate paths for our created expression. He now works in the movie industry in Hollywood. I turned to writing books.

 

Through college, I wrote short stories for creative writing classes, then ceased writing fiction upon graduation from college. For 35 years, I wrote no fiction whatsoever.

 

However, the writing didn’t stop in my head. Even when I wasn’t writing, I considered myself a writer. The stories nagged at me, wanting to find their way into the world. Finally, a few years ago, I began to write fiction again.

 

I forgot how therapeutic writing is. When I write, my mind entirely focuses on the story I’m pouring out through my keyboard. I forget the outside world. The story is my world. Its problems are my problems, all solvable through the strokes of my keyboard. It’s an especially excellent de-stressor to write at the end of the day to dissolve away other issues that come from real life.

 

Secondly, I write to share my stories with others. I believe each of us is blessed with some innate talent that allows us to enhance mankind in some small or sometimes greater way. For me, I like to think my storytelling ability contributes positively to my fellow man. My characters and story are constructed in a way that hopefully inspires others either as a desire to emulate a character’s behavior or in the revelation of redemption for past mistakes.

 

Admittedly, the third reason I write is for acknowledgement. Any creator of art truthfully wants to know that others appreciate his or her work. It brings great satisfaction to see positive reviews of your work, or for that matter, just have a reader give you a compliment in person. As writers, we live to have others appreciate our work and give it validation.

 

Perhaps the most important reason of all is the pure enjoyment we receive. My writing style is that of a pantser. I know the ending of my story when I begin, though it is subject to change, but how I will get there is a relative unknown. Each story I write is a new adventure. I create characters with little idea of which way they will go or what they will do. I don’t know who they will meet along the way. I am like the reader finding new twists and turns as I go. Nothing beats a good story!

 

 

 

 


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Gary W. Bryant is the author of the novels: Ace of Hearts  and Things Aren't What They Seem. He has worked as a newspaper reporter, editor, and magazine editor-in-chief, communications director for the Kentucky Retail Federation. He founded a small publishing company that produced marketing and training newsletters.

Hypothesis:

Any discussion of ethnolinguistic factors affecting language proficiency cannot be premised without examining the meaning of language. Cambridge Dictionary Online (2023) puts forward a concise definition that would be used in this paper: a system made up of phonemes, words, and grammar rules on how to use that particular language. An emphasis on maintaining a system of rules and standards in order to convey meaning in language is a persuasive argument (Open Learn, 2024).  The language under discussion here is the English used in two sub-Saharan countries, Sierra Leone, English 01 and Malawi, English 02.

Language had two of the meta functions first recognised by Thompson (2014 in Open Learn (2024)  in the creative pieces studied from March 2022 to December 2023: ideational and textual roles. In the poetry and stories analysed writers utilised English language to fictionally represent the world visualised in their imagination to convey written messages in textual forms.

In creative writing a speaker’s language is presumed to influence their thoughts and conceptualisation of ideas, validating the theory purported by German linguist Johann  Georg  Hamann (1905 cited in  De Gruyter Mouton 1968). Wilhelm von Humboldt discuss. Humboldt and Herder reportedly saw an alignment between language use and behavioural patterns affected by the speaker’s culture. Culture here is synonymous with how individuals from the same language community use the language under consideration based on recurrent themes and expressions in their writing. (Britannica, accessed 2023) This research concerns itself with factors affecting proficiency in English language based on common behaviours in aforenamed communities and from henceforth referred to as English 01 and English 02.

History of how English arrived in the chosen communities

To give a historical overview, English was transported to Malawi via the similar route of colonisation by Britian and the establishment of English speaking mainly missionary schools on whose premises school age children in  both nations were  taught in English. (Matiki, 2001; accessed in 2024.) A notable feature of the way English arrived in Sierra Leone was through the deportation of freed slaves…

 

Miriam Conteh-Morgan (1997) highlighted the lack of extensive sociological research into the use of English language in Sierra Leone; she argued that it may be due to an [erroneous] perception that English is a native Sierra Leonean language spoken by the Krios. Conteh-Morgan distinguishes the English spoken in Sierra Leone from the native speaker variety- the variation spoken in Sierra Leone has been influenced by indigenous languages. My research unearthed the influence of the Krio language on English evidenced by the lack of subject-verb number coordination in the third person singular in the material of a large cohort of creative writers studied from March 2022 to December 2023.

Role English plays in Malawi

To quote A. J. Matiki (2001), English was given official status in 1968 in Malawi when the government designated it as an official language. Mikiti has argues that assigning English such a high status has effectively led to the marginalisation of non-English speakers in the country. My contradictory argument centres on the need for Malawian creative writers to increase the frequency of English use in order to attain proficiency. This research shows a direct link between the use of the language for lengthy periods per day and a demonstration of level of proficiency required for writers.

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