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Wordwatching
Julian Burnside

Issue #0

Wordwatching

field notes from an amateur philologist

Scribe Publications (Dec 2006)
9781921215100
291 pages | 138 x 210 mm | English
Dewey 428
LC Classification PE1460 .B84 2006
LC Control No. 2007405137

Subject

  • English Language - Roots
  • English Language - Usage

Plot

We live in a torrent of words from radio and television, books and newspapers, and now from the internet. But, as Julian Burnside reminds us in this witty and erudite collection, words are both a source of pleasure and power, and can be deployed for good or for ill. Some of these essays explore curiosities in odd corners of the language simply to remind us of the extraordinary richness of the English language- we learn, for example, that the word pedigree refers to the shape of a stork's foot, and that halcyon recalls an early Greek love story. Other pieces use small matters of language to illustrate larger processes of cultural borrowing and change. Burnside's musings remind us that we should not be alarmed at the instability of the language; rather, we should be see its wanton borrowings as a source of strength and vitality. Wordwatchingalso reminds us of the need to be aware of the misuse of language in the service of sinister purposes whether political, ideological, social or personal.