Skip to main content Site map

Bad Language: Are Some Words Better Than Others?


Bad Language: Are Some Words Better Than Others?

Paperback by Battistella, Edwin L. (Dean, School of Arts and Letters, and Professor of English, Dean, School of Arts and Letters, and Professor of English, Southern Oregon University)

Bad Language: Are Some Words Better Than Others?

WAS £25.49   SAVE £3.82

£21.67

ISBN:
9780195337457
Publication Date:
1 Nov 2007
Language:
English
Publisher:
Oxford University Press Inc
Pages:
256 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 7 - 12 May 2024
Bad Language: Are Some Words Better Than Others?

Description

Is today's language at an all-time low? Edwin Battistella argues that it is wrong to think of slang, regional dialects and nonstandard grammar as simply breaking the rules of good English. Reexamining debates over relativism in language, Battistella argues that we should view language as made up of alternative forms of regularity and orderliness, which require informed engagement with usage.

Contents

Preface Bad Language: Realism versus Relativism Anything Goes A Culture of Engagement Bad Writing The Craft of Writing Clear and Direct The Relativity of Style What is Good Writing? Bad Grammar Prescriptive Grammar The Emergence of Prescriptivism The Doctrines of Usage and Utility The English Language Arts and Beyond Conservatives and Progressives The Necessity for Grammar Bad Words Cursing in the Media and the Arts Offensive Language Bad Words as a Social Construction Slang as Bad Language Political Correctness Conventionalism and Comfort Levels Bad Citizens Birth of a Nation Native American Languages Manualism versus Oralism Restrictions on Foreign Languages Bilingual Education English Only One Flag, One Language Bad Accents Broken English Attitudes Toward Regional Dialects Ebonics Accomodating to the Idealized Mainstream Images and Engagement Imagining Language English Made Hard Beyond Simplistic Characterizations Notes Reference Index

Back

University of Chester logo