ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Jamila Lyiscott - Poet and educator
Jamila Lyiscott weaves words about language, education and the African Diaspora.

Why you should listen

Jamila Lyiscott is currently an advanced doctoral candidate and adjunct professor at Columbia University’s Teachers College where her work focuses on the education of the African Diaspora. She is also an adjunct professor at Long Island University where she teaches on adult and adolescent literacy within the Urban Education system. A spoken word artist since the age of fifteen, Jamila works with youth, educators, and activists throughout the city to create spaces that reflect and engage the cultures and values of black and brown youth inside and outside of the classroom.

A Zankel Fellow, Lyiscott is also working as a Graduate Research Fellow at the Institute for Urban and Minority Education where she leads the Cyphers For Justice youth, research, and advocacy program. Jamila’s poetry and scholarly work has been published in Teachers and Writers Collaborative Magazine and English Journal. She has directed several conferences and projects both locally and internationally and has presented both spoken word and academic papers at many seminars. Through her community, scholastic, and artistic efforts, Jamila hopes to play a key role in forging better connections between the world of academia and communities of color outside.

Watch Lyiscott's Prezi, "How Broken English Made Me Whole."

More profile about the speaker
Jamila Lyiscott | Speaker | TED.com
TEDSalon NY2014

Jamila Lyiscott: 3 ways to speak English

Filmed:
4,547,574 views

Jamila Lyiscott is a “tri-tongued orator;” in her powerful spoken-word essay “Broken English,” she celebrates — and challenges — the three distinct flavors of English she speaks with her friends, in the classroom and with her parents. As she explores the complicated history and present-day identity that each language represents, she unpacks what it means to be “articulate.”
- Poet and educator
Jamila Lyiscott weaves words about language, education and the African Diaspora. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:12
Today,
0
703
1981
00:14
a baffled lady observed
1
2684
1640
00:16
the shell where my soul dwells
2
4324
1992
00:18
And announced that I'm
3
6316
3141
00:21
"articulate"
4
9457
1907
00:23
Which means that when it comes
5
11364
2338
00:25
to enunciation and diction
6
13702
1995
00:27
I don't even think of it
7
15697
1006
00:28
‘Cause I’m "articulate"
8
16703
2687
00:31
So when my professor asks a question
9
19390
2580
00:34
And my answer is tainted with a connotation
10
21970
2159
00:36
of urbanized suggestion
11
24129
1348
00:37
There’s no misdirected intention
12
25477
2466
00:40
Pay attention
13
27943
977
00:41
‘Cause I’m “articulate”
14
28920
2338
00:43
So when my father asks, “Wha’ kinda ting is dis?”
15
31258
3557
00:47
My “articulate” answer never goes amiss
16
34815
3138
00:50
I say “father, this is the impending problem at hand”
17
37953
3516
00:53
And when I’m on the block
18
41469
1327
00:54
I switch it up just because I can
19
42796
1695
00:56
So when my boy says, “What’s good with you son?”
20
44491
2638
00:59
I just say, “I jus’ fall out wit dem people but I done!”
21
47129
5410
01:04
And sometimes in class
22
52539
1592
01:06
I might pause the intellectual sounding flow to ask
23
54131
2929
01:09
“Yo! Why dese books neva be about my peoples”
24
57060
3665
01:12
Yes, I have decided to treat
25
60725
2165
01:15
all three of my languages as equals
26
62890
2062
01:17
Because I’m “articulate”
27
64952
3998
01:21
But who controls articulation?
28
68950
2421
01:23
Because the English language
is a multifaceted oration
29
71371
3154
01:26
Subject to indefinite transformation
30
74525
1819
01:28
Now you may think that it is
ignorant to speak broken English
31
76344
3613
01:32
But I’m here to tell you that
even “articulate” Americans
32
79957
3157
01:35
sound foolish to the British
33
83114
2000
01:37
So when my Professor comes on
the block and says, “Hello”
34
85114
3249
01:40
I stop him and say “Noooo …
35
88363
2637
01:43
You’re being inarticulate …
36
91000
2144
01:45
the proper way is to say ‘what’s good’”
37
93144
2163
01:47
Now you may think that’s too hood, that’s not cool
38
95307
3615
01:51
But I’m here to tell you that
even our language has rules
39
98922
2978
01:54
So when Mommy mocks me and says
40
101900
2612
01:56
“ya’ll-be-madd-going-to-the-store”
41
104512
2258
01:58
I say “Mommy, no, that sentence is not following the law
42
106770
4986
02:03
Never does the word "madd" go
before a present participle
43
111756
3691
02:07
That’s simply the principle of this English”
44
115447
2503
02:10
If I had the vocal capacity I would
45
117950
1670
02:11
sing this from every mountaintop,
46
119620
2054
02:13
From every suburbia, and every hood
47
121674
2276
02:16
‘Cause the only God of language is
the one recorded in the Genesis
48
123950
3553
02:19
Of this world saying “it is good"
49
127503
1717
02:21
So I may not always come before you
50
129220
2571
02:23
with excellency of speech
51
131791
1394
02:25
But do not judge me by my language and assume
52
133185
2531
02:27
That I’m too ignorant to teach
53
135716
1519
02:29
‘Cause I speak three tongues
54
137235
1550
02:30
One for each:
55
138785
1148
02:32
Home, school and friends
56
139933
1745
02:33
I’m a tri-lingual orator
57
141678
2204
02:36
Sometimes I’m consistent with my language now
58
143882
1969
02:38
Then switch it up so I don’t bore later
59
145851
1959
02:40
Sometimes I fight back two tongues
60
147810
1877
02:41
While I use the other one in the classroom
61
149687
1935
02:43
And when I mistakenly mix them up
62
151622
1925
02:45
I feel crazy like … I’m cooking in the bathroom
63
153547
3493
02:49
I know that I had to borrow your language
64
157040
4592
02:53
because mines was stolen
65
161632
2845
02:56
But you can’t expect me to speak your history wholly
66
164477
3900
03:00
while mines is broken
67
168377
1502
03:02
These words are spoken
68
169879
1519
03:03
By someone who is simply fed up with
69
171398
2307
03:05
the Eurocentric ideals of this season
70
173705
2620
03:08
And the reason I speak a composite
version of your language
71
176325
3483
03:12
Is because mines was raped
away along with my history
72
179808
3752
03:15
I speak broken English so the
profusing gashes can remind us
73
183560
4230
03:19
That our current state is not a mystery
74
187790
2260
03:22
I’m so tired of the negative images
that are driving my people mad
75
190050
5208
03:27
So unless you’ve seen it rob
a bank stop calling my hair bad
76
195258
4243
03:31
I’m so sick of this nonsensical racial disparity
77
199501
3656
03:35
So don’t call it good unless your hair is known
78
203157
2553
03:37
for donating to charity
79
205710
1545
03:39
As much as has been raped away from our people
80
207255
4927
03:44
How can you expect me to treat
their imprint on your language
81
212182
3939
03:48
As anything less than equal
82
216121
2614
03:50
Let there be no confusion
83
218735
1872
03:52
Let there be no hesitation
84
220607
1814
03:54
This is not a promotion of ignorance
85
222421
2064
03:56
This is a linguistic celebration
86
224485
3445
04:00
That’s why I put "tri-lingual" on my last job application
87
227930
5079
04:05
I can help to diversify your consumer market
88
233009
2731
04:07
is all I wanted them to know
89
235740
1632
04:09
And when they call me for the interview
90
237372
1733
04:11
I’ll be more than happy to show that
91
239105
1510
04:12
I can say:
92
240615
735
04:13
“What’s good”
93
241350
1213
04:14
“Whatagwan”
94
242563
985
04:15
And of course …“Hello”
95
243548
2904
04:18
Because I’m “articulate”
96
246452
2674
04:21
Thank you.
97
249126
1773
04:23
(Applause)
98
250899
1385

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Jamila Lyiscott - Poet and educator
Jamila Lyiscott weaves words about language, education and the African Diaspora.

Why you should listen

Jamila Lyiscott is currently an advanced doctoral candidate and adjunct professor at Columbia University’s Teachers College where her work focuses on the education of the African Diaspora. She is also an adjunct professor at Long Island University where she teaches on adult and adolescent literacy within the Urban Education system. A spoken word artist since the age of fifteen, Jamila works with youth, educators, and activists throughout the city to create spaces that reflect and engage the cultures and values of black and brown youth inside and outside of the classroom.

A Zankel Fellow, Lyiscott is also working as a Graduate Research Fellow at the Institute for Urban and Minority Education where she leads the Cyphers For Justice youth, research, and advocacy program. Jamila’s poetry and scholarly work has been published in Teachers and Writers Collaborative Magazine and English Journal. She has directed several conferences and projects both locally and internationally and has presented both spoken word and academic papers at many seminars. Through her community, scholastic, and artistic efforts, Jamila hopes to play a key role in forging better connections between the world of academia and communities of color outside.

Watch Lyiscott's Prezi, "How Broken English Made Me Whole."

More profile about the speaker
Jamila Lyiscott | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee