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Death Sentence: the Decay of Public Language
Don Watson

Issue #0

Death Sentence: the Decay of Public Language

the decay of public language

Alfred A Knopf (1 Jan 2003)
9781740512060
| Hardcover
198 pages | English
Dewey 427.994
LC Classification PE3601 .W37 2003
LC Control No. 2004426282

Subject

  • English Language - Social Aspects
  • English Language - Usage
  • Language And Culture
  • Sociolinguistics

Plot

ââ¬~â⬦in public life the language has never been held in less regard. It withers in the dungeons of the technocratic mind. It is butchered by the media. In politics it lacks all qualifications for the main game.' Don Watson Almost sixty years ago, George Orwell described the decay of language and why this threatened democratic society. But compared to what we now endure, the public language of Orwell's day brimmed with life and truth. Today's corporations, government departments, news media, and, perhaps most dangerously, politicians ââ¬" speak to each other and to us in clichéd, impenetrable, lifeless sludge. Don Watson can bear it no longer. In DEATH SENTENCE, part diatribe, part cool reflection on the state of Australia's public language, he takes a blowtorch to the words ââ¬" and their users ââ¬" who kill joy, imagination and clarity. Scathing, funny and brilliant, DEATH SENTENCE is a small book of profound weight ââ¬" and timeliness.