“The deathwatch over American English has begun again,” writes Harvey A. Daniels who, basing his arguments on data from professional linguists and language historians, proves that there is no reason to panic over the fate of the mother tongue, noting that “reports of the death of the English language are greatly exaggerated.”
Critics who zero in on the deteriorating state of the language ignore larger, more basic issues. Further, they “threaten to bring back old—or inspire new—teaching curricula and techniques which will hinder rather than enhance our children’s opportunity to develop their reading and writing and speaking skills.”
Paradoxically, those critics who claim overreaching importance for the language tend to trivialize the study of language “through their steadfast preoccupation with the form of language.” These critics “encourage us to continue using minor differences in language as ways of identifying, classifying, avoiding, or punishing anyone whom we choose to consider our social or intellectual inferior.”
Daniels refutes the idea that a literary crisis rages throughout the United States. He discredits the idea of the deterioration of language. In support of his conclusions, he marshalls the forces of history, showing that panics concerning the state of the language have occurred at regular intervals at least since 2400 B.C. Using the data and tools of the linguist, Daniels asserts that language cannot die, that it changes constantly, and that attitudes toward language are social attitudes.
Having established this point, he discusses at length our diminished prejudices against certain nonstandard dialects, our befuddled and uncompromising attempts to teach writing, the complex difficulties facing English teachers as the “crisis” enters its second decade, and the prospects for developing some respect for linguistic pluralism in America.
Famous Last Words is part-thriller, part-horror story; it is also a meditation on history and the human soul and it is Findley's fine achievement that he has combined these elements into a web that constantly surprises and astounds the ...
Closing words of the will of the English composer Henry Purcell ( d . 1695 ) It is my intention to make no provision herein for my son Christopher or my daughter Christina for reasons which are well known to them .
Jennifer Salvato Doktorski. Herjob is all about endings, but her own story is just beginning JENNIFER SALVATO DOKTORSKI Jennhcer Sa|vato Dok'corski.
This dissertation consists of a book-length collection of poems entitled Famous Last Words and a critical essay examining the development of an "American voice" in 20th century poetry, particularly the...
What were the final thoughts of great thinkers like Charles Darwin and Marie Curie? Or baseball legends like Babe Ruth and Mickey Mantle? Joseph Hayden reveals all these stories and much more in a book that you’ll wish would never end.
Who said 'I should have drunk more champagne'? Did Nelson really utter 'Kiss me Hardy' from his deathbed? Which statesman was, at the end, 'bored with it all'? Which king begged, 'Let not poor Nelly starve .
Famous Last Words traces a broad historical transition- from the 1840s to the 1980s- from the more rigid dichotomy of the Victorian novel, in which good women must marry and fallen women die, to the more open alternatives of twentieth ...
This tiny book collects the best final quips, dying words, and exit lines from Shakespeare’s spectacular oeuvre.
Famous Last Words
Jonathan Green is a noted lexicographer and the author of many books, including Slang Down the Ages.