New Books in Language show

New Books in Language

Summary: Discussions with Scholars of Language about their New Books

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  • Artist: New Books Network
  • Copyright: Copyright © New Books Network 2011

Podcasts:

 David Crystal, "Just a Phrase I'm Going Through: My Life in Language" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:02:51

David CrystalView on AmazonIn an enormously prolific writing and editing career, David Crystal has excelled in supplying volumes hitherto missing from the field: here a balanced and accessible introduction to general linguistics, there a lucid specialised textbook in an emerging field. With this memoir, Just a Phrase I'm Going Through: My Life in Language (Routledge, 2009), he fills another gap, and offers a vivid picture of the working life of a professional linguist. The book follows Crystal's career across an enormous range of linguistic disciplines, from English usage through clinical linguistics and on into semantic Web indexing. It also describes the many other channels along which Crystal's enthusiasm for language has run – reconstructing the speech sounds of Shakespeare for the stage, presenting the case for endangered languages, and doing battle with the forces of 'linguistic purism' on the radio. I talk with Crystal about his motivation for writing a memoir, the challenges of applied linguistics, and the unpredictable future of language and its study. Along the way, I learn how to sell parts of speech to a shoe merchant, how not to sell knives to internet users, and why we won't be seeing a Broadway musical on the topic of language death.

 Robert Lane Greene, "You Are What You Speak: Grammar Grouches, Language Laws and the Politics of Identity" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 0:00:01

Robert Lane GreeneView on AmazonIsn't it odd how the golden age of correct language always seems to be around the time that its speaker was in high school, and that language has been going to the dogs ever since? Such is the anguish of declinists the world over, pushing the commercial success of language-bashing stocking fillers. But what's the real reason that we get hung up on greengrocers' apostrophes and the superiority of certain language forms over others? Robert Lane Greene's premise is that for those who hold up the standardised variety as the one true voice, the authority of the prestige language is not about words and rules, but about the perceived superiority of the people who use it. Hand-wringing over glottal stops and 'ain't' contractions obscures attempts to define 'us' and distance 'them', and is a tool to support class, ethnic, or national prejudices. Lane's new book You Are What You Speak: Grammar Grouches, Language Laws and the Politics of Identity  (Delacorte Press, 2011) gives an overview of these traits and then focuses on situations in which linguistic policy has had huge political consequences or where civil unrest is manifested in language laws. We learn about the imposition of Afrikaans and the riots that marked the beginning of the end of apartheid, how Atatürk imposed a whole new way of using Turkish on his people, and why Catalan nationalism is back on the boil. I talk with Lane about small things like prepositions as well as weightier issues such as the oppression of minority groups and why George W. Bush's southern accent may have done him a few favours. We touch on people's deepest insecurities about the language they use and how bemoaning the loss of the glory days is a popular sport in language as in many other domains. We talk about Arabic, Catalan, French and Hindi. Lane busts a few language myths for us – not least that there is no such thing as a truly primitive language – and expands on his book which gives a comprehensive tour through history and politics across time and space. All this is done from the standpoint of languages and the societies that speak them.

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