What's language got to do with it?:
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
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Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York [u.a.]
Norton
2005
|
Ausgabe: | 1. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXXVI, 585 S. Ill. |
ISBN: | 0393978842 039392663x |
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adam_text | Contents
Preface v
Foreword by Shirley Brice Heath xxiii
Introduction: What s Language Got to Do with It? xxxi
T Language as Argument 1
CLYDE HABERMAN, In the Mideast This Year,
Even Words Shoot to Kill 4
A writer looks at how in the near-war that has enmeshed Israelis and
Palestinians, language is the weapon that may help decide who wins
KENDRA HAMILTON, YOU Say Hispanic, I Say Latino 9
So what precisely is the difference between Hispanic and Latino?
DEBORAH TANNEN, Fighting for Our Lives 13
Why does it matter that our public discourse is filled with military metaphors?
Because words matter
OTTO SANTA ANA, Immigration as Dangerous Waters:
The Power of Metaphor 25
A scholar examines how the media frames arguments that like waves on a
beach, flows of immigrants are remaking the face of America
CLIFF ROTHMAN A Welcome Mat for Lesbian and Gay Customers 42
Get out And stay out A writer looks at ads aimed at lesbian and gay
consumers
Contents
wordscanheaJ org 48
A Web site promoting the value and practice of ethical speech in order to
improve our democracy, build mutual respect, honor, and dignity in our
community
ANNA QUINDLEN, Some Struggles Never Seem to End 50
It seems quaintly anachronistic—and shocking—to have a 1970 account of the
Women s March for Equality interrupted by a small item reporting that Betty
Friedan was wearing a three-year-old raspberry colored shift and was late in
arriving because she had been at the hairdresser
ALICE DUER MILLER, Why We Oppose Votes for Men 57
A 1915 parody recasts then-current arguments for why women shouldn t be
allowed to vote
MlCHKO KAKUTANL Debate? Dissent? Discussion? Oh Don t Go There 59
It s as though there s no distinction between the person and the argument, as
though to criticize an argument would be injurious to the person
How Writing Changes Language
Some Consequences of Literacy 65
THE KWESTION OF SPELING 68
We accept all sorts of accents, dodgy grammar, constant neologisms, but bad
spelling ? No Try applying for a decent job with a misspelt CV
RICHARD LAWRENCE WADE, freespeiing com 68
JODY K BiEHL, Crisis of Letters in Germany 69
SIMON WINCHESTER, Roger and His Brilliant Unrivaled,
Maligned, and Detestable Thesaurus 72
A best-selling author questions the value of one of the most popular reference
books ever written, reminding us that there was no Roget in Shakespeare s time
Parti 72 PartII 80
MERCEDES-BENZ, Playing with Words to Sell Cars 90
Can you imagine a car ad that doesn t show the car?
Contents
PUNCTUATION PERIOD 97
The period tells you that you got all the writer intended to parcel out and
now you have to move along But with a semicolon there you get a pleasant lit-
tle feeling of expectancy; there is more to come; read on; it will get clearer
LEWIS THOMAS, Notes on Punctuation 98
ELLEN LUPTON AND I ABBOTT MILLER Period Styles:
A Punctuated History 101
POLICING USAGE IN THE COMICS 109
According to Mom, no problem is basically an inappropriate response to
thank you
ROBB ARMSTRONG, Jump Start 109
PAT BRADY, Rose Is Rose 110
MARY NEWTON BRUDER, grammarlady com 112
Dear Grammar Lady, Is it OK to use can in the expression Can I help you? or
is May I help you? the only correct thing to say?
GEORGE ORWELL, Politics and the English Language 114
A scrupulous writer, in every sentence that he writes, will ask himself What
am I trying to say? What words will express it? What image or idiom will make it
clearer? Is this image fresh enough to have an effect?
JACK ROSENTHAL, SO Here s What s Happening to Language 128
Informalization has steadily denatured many words once considered dirty
Even fastidious grandmothers now say, when confessing error, that they
screwed up
[3] Technology and (versus?) Language 133
DENNIS BARON The New Technologies of the Word 136
Once you start down the email path, there s no going back
JENNIFER 8 LEE / Think, Therefore IM 152
The language of instant messaging is creeping into student papers, and some
teachers are not amused
Contents
UR2KEWL ROMEO J57
Juliet: btw both my rents hate U
flomeo: mine hate U 2
JIM BORGMAN AND JERRY SCOTT Zits 157
BILL AMEND FoxTrot 157
Roz CHAST, The IMs of Romeo and Juliet 158
KATIE HAFNER, Happy Birthday:-) to You: A Smiley Face Turns 20 160
A technology writer examines the birth of an emoticon
AMY BORKOWSKY, Amy s Answering Machine 163
Yeah, hello, Amila They just said on TV, It s 10 PM, do you know where your
children are? And I m thinking I don t know, so I figured I d call you Call me
when you get this message, honey, ok? Bye-Bye
WHY NOT EVERYONE LIKES POWERPOINT 168
The more PowerPoint presentations you prepare, the more the world seems to
package itself into slide-sized chunks, broken down into bullet items or grouped
in geometric patterns
GEOFFREY NUNBERG, The Trouble with PowerPoint 169
CLIVE THOMPSON, PowerPoint Makes You Dumb 171
TECHNOLOGIES AND RELIGIOUS PRACTICES 174
Our embrace of technology goes back to the understanding that everything in
this world was created to serve Hashem
YILU ZHAO, LOSS of Net Halts an Online Ritual 174
DEBRA NUSSBAUM COHEN Hot-Synching with a Heavenly
Presence J76
[4] Multilingual USA
HYON B SHIN AND ROSALIND BRUNO, Census 2000 181
In 2000, 18 percent of the total population aged 5 and over, or 47 million people
in the United States, reported they spoke a language other than English at home
Contents
JANNY SCOTT, Foreign Born in U S at Record High 197
Is the presence of large proportions of Asians, Latinos and black immigrants
changing Americans notions of race?
Spanish en Los Estados Unidos 200
MARJORIE AGOSIN, Always Living in Spanish 201
English 204
A poet and essayist writes of her dilemma as one who writes in Spanish and
lives in translation
MYRIAM MARQUEZ, Why and When We Speak Spanish in Public 207
A writer explains how her language use is a matter of respect for our parents
and comfort in our cultural roots
SANDRA CISNEROS Excerpt from Bien Pretty 210
When Flavio accidentally hammered his thumb, he never yelled Ouch! He
said |Ay! The true test of a native Spanish speaker
ANA CELIA ZENTELLA The Hows and Whys of Spanglish 213
Bilingual children acquire rules not only for when and where each of their
languages may be used, but also for whether and how the two may be woven
together
CODESWITCHING IN THE COMICS 230
You look fantastico, Luann Muy fant6stico
GREG EVANS, Luann 230
HECTOR CANTO AND CARLOS CASTELLANOS, Baldo 231
DIANE SMITH, Newcomers Confront Language Melting Pot 233
Immigrants to North Texas know that they will have to work hard, save money,
and learn English But survival in their new surroundings often means learning
some Spanish, too
A Host of Other Tongues 236
CLYDE HABERMAN The Oys of Yiddish (Ignore at Your Peril) 237
Yiddish, the language of European Jews, has become mainstream in America,
land of the free and home of the bagel
Contents
AMY TAN, Mother Tongue 243
I spend a great deal of time thinking about the power of language—the way it
can evoke an emotion, a visual image, a complex idea, or a simple truth Lan-
guage is the tool of my trade
LAN CAO, Keeper of the Word 249
For my mother and her Vietnamese neighbors, I became the keeper of the
word Like Adam, I had the God-given right to name all the fowls of the air
and all the beasts of the field
HIEN NGUYEN Memories 255
MONILEAK OURNG, Negotiating Identity 257
A student recalls Taiwanese as the language of the past, the language of her
childhood the language of her mother s pleasant voice singing lullabies
America s First Languages 266
DOUG ABRAHMS, Tribes Struggle to Keep Languages Alive 267
Language is essential to the continuance of our cultural and spiritual traditions
and is an acknowledgment of our gift from the great creator
MONIQUE BALAS, She Remembers So Others Can Learn 269
Oneida language is culture It s just our way
DORREEN YELLOW BIRD Keeping the Flame of a Language Alive 270
I first heard my nephew speak the language in a ceremony It was as if the
grandfathers were speaking to us
[U Talking While Black
African American Language in the United States 273
PATRICIA SMITH, Talking Wrong 275
I want to talk right before I die, Mama says, Want to stop saying ain t and /
done been, like I don t have no sense I done lived too long to be stupid, acting
like 1 just got oil the boat
Contents
JOHN RICKFORD, Suite for Ebony and Phonics 278
What s really important about Ebonics is not what kind of language it isn t, but
what kind it is
ROBB ARMSTRONG, Jump Start 287
You re in luck I m fluent in slang
DAVID D TROUTT, Defining Who We Are in Society 289
Perhaps nothing defines us more than our linguistic skills; nothing determines as
much about where we can and cannot go How we talk may be the first—and
last—clue about our intelligence and whether we re trusted or feared, heard or
ignored, admitted or excluded
MICHAEL ERARD, Can You Be Discriminated Against Because of the
Way You Speak? 294
Race, after all, is something one sees, not hears Or is it?
ABCNEWS COM, Linguistic Profiling: A Quiz 300
Can you describe someone s race or ethnicity based on his or her speech?
JOHN BAUGH, Linguistic Pride and Racial Prejudice 302
When I was three or four, one of the older Sisters from our church paid a social
call on my parents Seeing me, she exclaimed, Tou sho is a fine young man To
which I was said to reply, Are! You are a fine young man
JUNE JORDAN, Nobody Mean More to Me Than You and the Future Life
of Willie Jordan 314
A scholar examines how none of her students had ever learned how to read
and write their own verbal system of communication: Black English
/ Has a Dream 331
An ad about Ebonics
j His and Hers
Language and Gender 333
LYNDA R WILLER, Welcome to Your World, Baby 336
With pinks and blues, and snakes and snails, baby cards send a definite mes-
sage about girl babies and boy babies
Contents
PENELOPE ECKERT AND SAUY MCCONNELL-GINET,
Learning to Be Gendered 347
The making of a man or a woman is a never-ending process that begins before
birth—from the moment someone begins to wonder if the child will be a boy or a
girl
LINDA WERTHEIMER AND CATHY DUCHAMP, HOW to Sound More
Feminine 361
What makes a voice like Marilyn Monroe s female?
DAN PIRARO, Bizarro 366
Come to Mama! A cartoon takes a humorous look at men, women, and street
remarks
IF THIS CAR COULD TALK 368
Two images comment on the identification of cars with women
DARRYL MCGRATH The Return of Girl 371
The word girl is making a comeback Feminists are taking note, and not all
of them are pleased
JOHN MCWHORTER Missing the Nose on Our Face: Pronouns and the
Feminist Revolution 376
He or she is founded upon good intentions, but ultimately it will not do
SEXIST PRONOUNS AND USAGE GUIDES 384
Three usage guides take three different approaches to sexist language
ANDREA LUNSFORD from The Everyday Writer 385
MAXDJE HAIRSTON AND JOHN RUSZDEWICZ
from The Scott Foresman Handbook for Writers 387
AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION, from the Publication Manual
of the American Psychological Association 390
Contents
[7] Language in Deaf Communities 393
CAROL PADDEN AND TOM HUMPHRIES Learning to Be Deaf 396
Sam does not yet understand that the outside world considers him and his
family to have an affliction; to him, it is the neighbors who lack the ability to
communicate
The American Sign Language Fingerspelling Site 408
CAN T ALL DEAF PEOPLE READ LIPS? 409
Our lives are filled with hubbub and noise—visual noise
MATTHEW S MOORE AND LINDA LEVITAN,
Questions amp; Answers from Deaf Life 409
GREG EVANS Luann 414
ANDREW SOLOMON, Defiantly Deaf 416
I am Deaf and proud and I don t want to be hearing or different in any
way from who I am
Parti 416 Part II 424 Part 111 434
BRENDA JO BRUEGGEMANN, Call to A G Bell 443
I try signing, / hand across space / in your face / and you avert your eyes
[8] Languages and National Identities 447
LANGUAGE AND THE LAW: TWO CASES FROM CANADA 450
We are surrounded by a sea of Anglophones
DENEEN BROWN, Quebec Tongue Troopers Defend French 451
ANDREW DUFFY Nunavuf Wants Quebec-Style Sign Law 453
Contents
NATIVE AMERICAN IMAGES AS TEAM ICONS 455
The use of Indian mascots remains controversial at a handful of major
universities
ANDREA WOO Polls Apart: A Survey 456
MIKE WISE The Squabbling lllini: Rallying Cries Lead to Rift 457
HUGH POPE, A Soup of Alphabets Bedevils Azeri 462
No one can decide how to write out the language spoken in Azerbaijan
DAVID W CHEN Chinese Papers Really Change Direction 466
The world of Chinese newspapers in America has been turned upside down
Instead of hewing to the tradition of printing the text vertically, from right to left,
the newspapers now read like their English-language counterparts
JOHN MILLER, English Is Broken Here 470
A nation noted for its diversity needs certain instruments of unity to keep the
piuribus from overrunning the unum Our common citizenship is one such tool
Another, equally important, is the English language
DENNIS BARON, Don t Make English Official—Ban It Instead 477
A common language can often be the cause of strife and misunderstanding
Look at Ireland and Northern Ireland, or the Union and the Confederacy One
English professor modestly proposes that banning English would prevent that
kind of divisiveness in America today
TOM TOMORROW, This Modern World 480
Is making English America s official language as crazy as designating the sun
our official source of heat and light?
GEOFFREY NUNBERG, Reimagining America 482
A linguist describes how many people come to see language not only as a
means of communication but also as the essential ingredient of nationhood
Parti 482 Part II 487 Part 111 494
Contents
[]9] Globalizing English soi
DAVID CRYSTAL Why a Global Language? 504
Why was Greek once the language of international communication in the
Middle East? Credit the armies of Alexander the Great
BETH DUFF-BROWN, Customer Service Calls Routed to India 516
Indian customer service operators bone up on sports terms, slang, and
Friends to bridge the cultural divide between Bombay and Boston
HENRY CHU, Taiwan s Toddlers Learn English 520
Though still a toddler, Monica is already learning English, having been enrolled
in an intensive language program since she was barely out of diapers
DEREK ZHU, Konglish: It s Not That Bad 523
A Singaporean living in Seoul defends Konglish, a colloquial variety of English
spoken in Korea
SHASHI THAROOR, A Bedeviling Question in the Cadence of English 526
English is the language that brings those various threads of India together,
the language in which my wife could speak to her mother-in-law, the language
that enables a Calcuttan to function in Coimbatore
JOHN TAGLIABUE, In Europe, Going Global Means, Alas, English 531
A news reporter describes how many Europeans reluctantly take on English as
their lingua franca for business
BARBARA WALLRAFF, What Global Language? 535
Conventional wisdom holds that English is destined to be the world s lingua
franca—if it isn t already But linguists see a far more complicated picture
Parti 535 Part II 544
Glossary 555
Rhetorical Index 569
Text and Image Acknowledgments 575
Index 581
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spellingShingle | What's language got to do with it? Sprache Language and languages Soziolinguistik (DE-588)4077623-2 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4077623-2 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | What's language got to do with it? |
title_auth | What's language got to do with it? |
title_exact_search | What's language got to do with it? |
title_full | What's language got to do with it? Keith Walters ... |
title_fullStr | What's language got to do with it? Keith Walters ... |
title_full_unstemmed | What's language got to do with it? Keith Walters ... |
title_short | What's language got to do with it? |
title_sort | what s language got to do with it |
topic | Sprache Language and languages Soziolinguistik (DE-588)4077623-2 gnd |
topic_facet | Sprache Language and languages Soziolinguistik Aufsatzsammlung |
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