Esperanto in popular culture

References to Esperanto, a constructed language, have been made in a number of films and novels. Typically, this is done either to add the exoticness of a foreign language without representing any particular ethnicity, or to avoid going to the trouble of inventing a new language. In science fiction, Esperanto is often used to represent a future in which there is a more universally spoken language than exists today.

In English-language media

Film

Scene from Chaplin's The Great Dictator with a shop sign reading Vestaĵoj Malnovaj ("Old Clothes").

Television

Literature

Music

Video games

In continental Europe

Political writing

Satire

In Japan

Product branding

Television

Films in Esperanto

See also

References

  1. The Great Dictator (1940) - Trivia
  2. Blade: Trinity (movie) Flags of the World website
  3. Perkins, Dennis (9 March 2014). "The Simpsons: ‘Diggs’/‘The Man Who Grew Too Much’". Skinner muses excitedly: ‘Can the Esperanto society be far behind!’. See also this YouTube video.
  4. "Esperanto and George Orwell". Archived from the original on 2005-01-14. Retrieved 2006-09-13.
  5. Paul Tomlinson, Harry Harrison: An Annotated Bibliography Wildside Press LLC, 2002. ISBN 1587154013 (p. 324-4).
  6. O. Henry (1941). "A Municipal Report". In M. Edmund Speare. A Pocket Book of Short Stories (8th Printing ed.). New York: Washington Square Press, Inc. p. 228.
  7. Pichismo website