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The Fight for Englishhow language pundits ate, shot, and left David Crystal is a prolific writer on the subject of English language. His output ranges from scholarly works of reference such as The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Language, to popular studies of modern usage such as his recent Words, Words, Words which tries to keep track of concepts of language.
The advent of printing began the process of standardisation - though it was hampered at first by lots of regional variations. Then early attempts at spelling reform were thwarted by lack of agreement between competing suggestions. The first textbooks on grammar began to appear in the late sixteenth century and were followed by attempts to 'regulate' language via institutions such as the Royal Society. These too were unsuccessful - just as those of the Academie Francaise continue to be today. Crystal has a high regard for Dr Johnson, compiler of the first really authoritative dictionary in English - but as he points out, even Johnson realised, after his monumental efforts to pin down the spelling and meaning of words, that language changes:
He makes what can be a complex issue easy to understand by breaking his argument down into separate short chapters - Standards, Grammar, Punctuation, Spelling - and so on. And he presents the whole development of English as a constant flux, with tensions between linguistic pedants and actual popular usage. It's a process which he sees as self-correcting:
He mounts a vigorous attack on prescriptive grammarians, then the same on the pronunciation police - demolishing all their pontifications with the same argument - that the 'standards' which they claim to be absolute are often either recent innovations, or are already out of date. The latter part of the book is an assessment of the current state of English language teaching in schools, and an explanation of why he finds hope in the National Curriculum, which he helped to frame. This is a user-friendly book, written in a plain-speaking style, and his arguments are ultimately convincing. But he's not as funny as Lynne Truss. © Roy Johnson 2006 [more LANGUAGE books] David Crystal, The Fight for English, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006, pp.239, ISBN 0199207640 |
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