1st Edition

Proper English

By Tony Crowley Copyright 1991
    278 Pages
    by Routledge

    278 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1991. Debates about the state and status of the English language are rarely debates about language alone. Closely linked to the question, what is proper English? is another, more significant social question: who are the proper English? The texts in this book have been selected to illustrate the process by which particular forms of English usage are erected and validated as correct and standard. At the same time, the texts demonstrate how a certain group of people, and certain sets of cultural practices are privileged as correct, standard and central. Covering a period of three hundred years, these writers, who include Locke, Swift, Webster, James, Newbolt and Marenbon, wrestle with questions of language change and decay, correct and incorrect usage, what to prescribe and proscribe. Reread in the light of recent debates about cultural identity - how is it constructed and maintained? what are its effects? - these texts clearly demonstrate the formative roles of race, class and gender in the construction of proper ‘Englishness' . Tony Crowley's introductory material breaks new ground in rescuing these texts from the academic backwater of the 'history of the language' and in reasserting the central role of language in history.

    Chapter 1 Introduction Language, history and the formation of cultural identity; Chapter 2 John Locke; Chapter 3 Jonathan Swift; Chapter 4 Samuel Johnson; Chapter 5 Thomas Sheridan; Chapter 6 James Buchanan; Chapter 7 Noah Webster; Chapter 8 John Walker; Chapter 9 John Pickering; Chapter 10 T. Watts; Chapter 11 Archbishop R.C. Trench; Chapter 12 Proposal; Chapter 13 G.F. Graham; Chapter 14 Henry Alford; Chapter 15 Henry James; Chapter 16 Henry Newbolt; Chapter 17 Henry Wyld; Chapter 18 A.S.C. Ross; Chapter 19 Alison Assiter; Chapter 20 John Marenbon;

    Biography

    Tony Crowley, University of Southampton