English, asked by lalchhuanawma1792, 1 year ago

will they make them sing in german too. explain the statement?

Answers

Answered by CarliReifsteck
74

Answer :

In the chapter 'The Last Lesson,' Franz thinks ‘Will they make them sing in German, even the pigeons?' This thought comes to him because he realizes that Germans were forcing the people to change their mother tongue from French to German. He had the highest regard for his mother tongue and considered it the most beautiful, clearest and logical language in the world. He viewed this exchange as unfair and unkind as the people were not used to the foreign language. It seemed to him as unnatural as forcing the pigeons to sing in German.

Answered by soumya1139
24

Answer:

The Last Lesson

Explanation:

Alphonse Daudet’s ‘The Last Lesson’ very prominently raises the question of linguistic and cultural hegemony of the colonial and imperial powers and their lust for controlling the world and influencing their cultures and identities. Prussians acquired the districts of Alsace and Lorraine in Franco-Prussian War , but they were not satisfied with mere political domination ,they desired to enforce their own language on the people of the defeated nation. They released the order that from now German would be taught in schools rather than French. Franz wondered whether they would make even pigeons sing in German. It means that they had grown up using French as their language and now snatching away their language from them would be unfair and unkind. The language was as natural to them as cooing is to the pigeon. So, compulsion to speak another language is like dominating the force of nature and enslaving it. As it is next to impossible to alter the way pigeons sing, in the same way it is difficult for people to accept a language which is forcibly imposed on them. Adopting a new language causes pain and discomfort. Or This sentence could possibly mean that however hard the authorities try to embed German language in the culture of Alsace and Lorraine, the natural status of French, for them, will remain unchanged. French flows in the air and the entire place is imbued with its effect. Even though they train students in German, the basic mode of communication would remain unchanged like the cooing of the pigeons.

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