Swearing in English: Bad Language, Purity and Power from 1586 to the Present

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Routledge, 2004 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 304 pages

Do men use bad language more than women? How do social class and the use of bad language interact? Do young speakers use bad language more frequently than older speakers? Using the spoken section of the British National Corpus, Swearing in English explores questions such as these and considers at length the historical origins of modern attitudes to bad language.

Drawing on a variety of methodologies including historical research and corpus linguistics, and a range of data such as corpora, dramatic texts, early modern newsbooks and television, Tony McEnery takes a socio-historical approach to discourses about bad language in English. Arguing that purity of speech and power have come to be connected via a series of moral panics about bad language, the book contends that these moral panics, over time, have generated the differences observable in bad language usage in present day English.

A fascinating, comprehensive insight into an increasingly popular area, this book provides an explanation, and not simply a description, of how modern attitudes to bad language have come about.

 

Contents

1 Bad language bad manners
1
Part 1 How Brits swear47
23
2 So you recorded swearing
24
Part 2 Censors zealots and fourletter assaults on authority
51
3 Early modern censorship of bad language
52
4 Modern attitudes to bad language form
71
5 Latetwentiethcentury bad language
102
Part 3 Discourses of panic
130
6 Sea change
131
7 Mutations
166
Postscript
204
Notes
207
Bibliography
236
Index
243
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