"No French, no more": language-based exclusion in North America's first professional accounting association, 1879-1927

Citation
Spence, Crawford, "No French, no more": language-based exclusion in North America's first professional accounting association, 1879-1927, Accounting history review (Print) , 21(2), 2011, pp. 163-184
ISSN journal
21552851
Volume
21
Issue
2
Year of publication
2011
Pages
163 - 184
Database
ACNP
SICI code
Abstract
1This paper draws on Bourdieu's sociolinguistic theory to interpret the overrepresentation of Anglophone accountants vis-à-vis Francophone comptables in the formative years of North America's first professional accounting association. In a linguistic market, where English was taken for granted as the official language of commerce, we find that the founding members of the Association of Accountants in Montreal (AAM) possessed a .distinctive. cultural and linguistic habitus. We observe that the AAM enacted for many years a number of exclusion strategies to effectively limit its admittance of Francophone compatibles who possessed a different cultural and linguistic habitus. When the AAM eventually did explicitly embrace Francophone memberships, this was in order to counter the threat of a rival accounting designation.