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Power of Babel : A Natural History of Language |
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by John H. McWhorter
McWhorter surveys the evolution of language and describes how it mutates over time in a natural process informed by culture and history. From the first Homo sapiens communication, 5000 different languages have emerged today from a single source. Book Description: McWhorter (Losing the Race; Word on the Street) surveys the evolution of language and describes how it mutates over time in a natural process informed by culture and history. From the first Homo sapiens communication, 5000 different languages have emerged today from a single source. Tracing how such progression happens, McWhorter discusses culture, society, and the mutations they create. He sees the phenomena of slang and dialects not as a decay but as a natural evolution that adapts over time fostering new forms of expressiveness. There are approximately 6000 languages on earth today, the descendants of the tongue first spoken by homo sapiens some 150,000 years ago. How did they all develop? What happened to the first language? In this irreverent romp through territory too often claimed by stodgy grammarians, McWhorter ranges across linguistic theory, geography, history, and pop culture to tell the fascinating story of how thousands of very different languages have evolved from a single, original source in a natural process similar to biological evolution. While laying out how languages mix and mutate over time, he reminds us of the variety within the species that speaks them, and argues that, contrary to popular perception, language is not immutable and hidebound, but a living, dynamic entity that adapts itself to an ever-changing human environment. Full of humor and imaginative insight, The Power of Babel draws its examples from languages around the world, including pidgins, creoles, patois, and nonstandard dialects. McWhorter also discusses current theories on what the first language might have been like, why dialects should not be considered "bad speech," and why most of today's languages will be extinct in 100 years. The first book written for the layperson about the natural history of language, Power of Babel is a dazzling tour de force that will leave readers anything but speechless. From the Back Cover: Praise for John McWhorter
McWhorter's arguments are sharply reasoned, refreshingly honest, and thoroughly original, and befitting a book on language, they are lucidly and elegantly expressed.
McWhorter has done an admirable job of bridging the gap between the linguists' view of language and the public's.
Whatever one's opinion on particular cases, it is indisputable that Mr. McWhorter is a lively judge of the English language, and a sober judge of all disputes that swirl around it. About the Author: JOHN MCWHORTER is Associate Professor of Linguistics at the University of California at Berkeley. Born in Philadelphia, he earned a master's degree in American Studies at NYU and received his Ph.D. in linguistics from Stanford University. His specialty within linguistics is pidgin and creole languages, about which he has written two academic books. His articles have appeared in all major linguistics journals. He was extensively consulted by the media during the Ebonics controversy of 1997, including The New York Times, Newsweek, The Today Show, National Public Radio (guest on Talk of the Nation), and Dateline NBC; he also published an editorial on Ebonics in the Wall Street Journal. McWhorter is the author of Word on the Street: Fact and Fable about American English and Losing the Race: Self-Sabotage in Black America.
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