She is now learning English to connect with the
Anglophonic world in a new way.
On the other hand, having a less
Anglophonic centered approach, notwithstanding his total dependence upon English primary sources, Ulrichsen reminds the reader that "most of the key decisions that affected local politics, economics and society in the Middle East continued to be taken by external, colonial actors.
The set of
Anglophonic countries comprising the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand corresponded to 87.6% of the sample.
(285)
Anglophonic Britain likewise shares with the U.S.
French is widely spoken, but
Anglophonic tourists are welcome and won't starve.
Rooted to a degree in the Chimbu case, which authors routinely cited, this literature would inspire a sea change within
Anglophonic social anthropology from a focus on African to New Guinea highland societies, with the ANU Department of Anthropology and Sociology leading the way.
Thomas McNevin's assertion that "we must be cosmopolitan and deviate reasonably from our native bogs" (77) pithily captures one strand of
Anglophonic thinking in the movement.
First established in
Anglophonic academia, the theoretical approach travelled to Europe during the 1990's and led to the emergence of post- and de-colonial perspectives as an academic part of progressive leftist politics.
waggishly
Anglophonic, Princeton-ish academic voice to a voice of much
(73) There were also the Scottish Enlightenment's tradition of enquiry, the forensic habit instilled by Scottish medical prowess in the nineteenth century, the identity splitting implied by being Scottish and at the same time British, and access by the
Anglophonic Scots to the intelligence opportunities offered by the British Empire.
Readers will likely find the approach to persons richer than often seen in contemporary
anglophonic philosophy.