by rhywun-arall » Fri Jul 30, 2010 5:31 pm
Yeah, I don't think the English would ever see any political, cultural or economic gains in a revival of Anglo-Saxon English. The mutual destruction of Anglo-Saxon & Norman-French seen in the Middle English fusion of those languages, is also an event which sees the English nation fused with the feudal interests of the Norman elite. In many ways, this makes most Englishman an agent of the elitist interests of the 'British' (Anglo-Norman) imperial establishment. No matter how lowly on the rungs of the establishment hierarchy an Englishman stands, he can take some sollace in the notion that he is at least one rung above the dirt-poor Celts - and he might voice his distain for them largely, because there is tacit approval in him doing so from his peers on his rung, and from those rungs of the establishment above him. Empire - including those "Rebellious Scots to crush" was always the bottom rung of the 'British' hierarchy which prevented the English working classes from being the true butt of their own social order, so it's somewhat understandable that they wouldn't want to see the arrangement their national esteem rests upon undermined.
I suppose, in a nutshell, the phenomenon of cultural liquidation is something we see when human beings cease to operate within natural, autonomous, subsisting communities/economies and are brought under alien feudal, imperial or capitalist control where human beings are then reduced to mere 'tools' of the new feudal, imperial or capitalist class: Where human beings are reduced to mere 'tool's their function as such becomes more efficient when they can readily understand the orders of their new masters, and where it also becomes desirable that they have no additional language for conspiracy or sedition within that order of things. Cultural liquidation is an obvious stragegy in the cultural hegemony of an imperial power.
On that last point, much of the Anglophone prejudice against the Celts is paranoia, but I think in some subtle ways, stems also from an element of jealousy that unlike the English, (hopelessly fused as they are to the elite interests of their Anglo-Norman 'nation'), the Celts do have a political escape route from subjugation to that hierarchy in the rights to autonomy which their various nationhoods bring. It's here that you see the more Socialistic or Anarchistic English folk who move to the Celtic fringe, occasionally do more in support of the national sovereigntist movement of the regions they've moved to than many local nationals would - some people see more to be gained in political independence from the corrupt and exploitative British establishment than others.