Qyöt27
AMV Editor At Large
- Apr 2, 2004
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It's not that wide swaths of area are like that, it's more like dozens of Little [insert demography city here] in major metro areas. The only big area I know of in the South that speaks a different language is Acadiana, aka Cajun country. And in that instance, the language is Cajun or Créole French, not Spanish. I do have to say I was rather disappointed when passing through Louisiana that there weren't any bilingual road signs save for the Welcome to Louisiana/Bienvenue en Louisiane sign we saw when we entered the state during our trip home to Florida from Missouri.Wow. I haven't spent a lot of time in the South (just enough to pass through, for the most part), but never knew it was that linguistically diverse.
Of course, even though that's a geographically large area, the population density of the big Spanish parts of say, Miami or Tampa probably outclasses it by a lot. I have no idea what the linguistic geography is in Miami, but in Tampa it's mainly Ybor City that acts as essentially 'Little Havana'.
Or for an odd example, my home county (Pinellas) has a big Greek-speaking population in Tarpon Springs.
I think a big part of the issue is with the impression sometimes given out. People don't view Acadiana or Tarpon Springs as threatening - they're viewed as a benefit of diversity and a rich cultural heritage. It's only Spanish that's viewed as threatening. Part of that may be because of historical tensions between the British and Spanish Empires, or between the US and Mexico or Spain (seeing as we also fought wars with both of them), or for the more mundane or casual observer, it's because the heavily-Spanish areas are often very poverty-stricken and therefore have a higher percentage of crime. That might just be a polite way of tiptoeing around the issue of anti-Hispanic xenophobia, though.
In the end, it doesn't matter what the reasons actually are: the US may be majority-English, but no language is officially recognized, to the point of the suggestion that we have an official language even being rejected by the Founding Fathers IIRC (and for that matter, one of the suggestions being tossed around then was making the US German-speaking in order to distance ourselves from Britain). If a person can live in a non-English-speaking area and has no need to travel outside that area, then there's simply no benefit involved. And if one language overtakes another, then that's just life. It happened when the English of the lower classes overtook the French of the ruling Normans (although it does somewhat survive in Legal French, sort of like Ecclesiastical Latin).
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