The Other Tongue is a prophetic book, but not after the manner of Cassandra. Its prophecies have been heard as well as fulfilled. The study of English as an international language, now well established around the world, is due in no small measure to the influence of this book and the associated work of Braj Kachru.The other side of English / Braj B. Kachru --pt. 1. English in non-native directions and Sociology of English as an additional language / Joshua A. Fishman --The localized forms of English / Peter Strevens --Models for non-native Englishes / Braj B. Kachru --Intelligibility and non-native varieties of English / Cecil Nelson --pt. 2. formal and The Africanization of English / Eyamba G. Bokamba --Standard Nigerian issues of identification / Ayo Bamgbose --Kenyan English / Jane E. Zuengler --Chinese varieties of English / Chin-Chuan Cheng --English in a South Indian urban context / Kamal K. Sridhar --Singapore rhetorical and communicative styles / Jack C. Richards --English in Japanese communicative strategies / James Stanlaw --Toward a description of Caribbean English / Dennis R. Craig --Caribbean form and function / Lilith M. Haynes --pt. 3. Contact and question of a American from a colonial substandard to a prestige language / Henry Kahane --American quest for a model / Shirley Brice Heath --still more language contact in Puerto Rico / Rose Nash --The life cycle of non-native a case study / Rodney F. Moag --pt. 4. New English themes and Non-native English context and relevance / S.N. Sridhar --Style range in new English literatures / Ann Lowry Weir --pt. 5. text in Meaning in toward understanding non-native English texts / Braj B. Kachru.
Braj B. Kachru was Center for Advanced Study Professor of Linguistics and Jubilee Professor of Liberal Arts and Sciences Emeritus, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Illinois, USA.