Language - The Loaded Weapon: The Use and Abuse of Language Today

Front Cover
Routledge, Jun 11, 2014 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 224 pages

Today there is a reawakening interest in how language affects our lives. It comes with every threat to our safety and every promise of better times. It is a burning issue among minorities and a running debate between the attackers and defenders of our schools. Our deepest problems all are entangled with it: What shall be the official speech of emerging nations like Zambia and the Philippines, or even in certain areas of established ones like Belgium and Canada? What kind of English should be taught, or should there be no standard at all? How is government to make its regulations understandable? What are the verbal persuasions of television doing to our children? Which way does information flow, what are its biases, when does it inform and when conceal, and who benefits? Are the people who consider themselves experts in these matters as expert as they pretend to be? We feel adrift in a sea of words, and would welcome and a chart and a compass.

Language – The Loaded Weapon offers a glimpse of what the recent study of language is beginning to tell us about these things. It explains in simple terms the essentials of linguistic form and meaning, and applies them to illuminate questions of correctness, truth, class and dialect, manipulation through advertising and propaganda, sexual and other discrimination, official obfuscation and the maintenance of power, and – most pervasive of all – language as the vital agent with which we build our worlds. Explaining language has been Dwight Bolinger’s life work, and as his invigorating new book amply shows he believes that what is true and important can also be made clear and pleasurable.

 

Contents

1 Lo the shaman
1
2 The nonverbal womb
10
3 Signs and symbols
17
4 Above the word
25
5 Appointment in Babylon
38
6 Stigma status and standard
44
7 We reduced the size because we didnt want to increase the price
58
8 Guns dont kill people people kill people
68
the jargonauts and the notsogolden fleece
125
12 Rival metaphors and the confection of reality
138
bluenoses and coffin nails
156
14 School for shamans
164
15 An ecology of language
182
Notes to chapters
189
Further reading
202
Index
205

sexism
89
10 Power and deception
105

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About the author (2014)

Dwight Bolinger

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