Language Anxiety

Conflict and Change in the History of English

Tim William Machan author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:29th Jan '09

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Language Anxiety cover

This book looks at the ever-present anxieties associated with language change. Focusing on English from Alfred the Great to the present, Tim Machan offers a fresh perspective on the history of language. He reveals amusing and sometimes disconcerting aspects of our linguistic and social behavior and suggests that anxiety about language has sometimes allowed us to avoid the issues we really find disturbing: when speakers of English worry over grammar, sounds, or words the real source of their anxiety is often not language at all but issues like immigration or social instability. Drawing on an array of evidence from archives, literature, history, polemics, and the press, as well as centuries of legislation, Tim Machan uncovers the perennial nature of concerns about the poverty and purity of English. There has never been a time, he shows, when we weren't worried about the corruption of language and its apparent connections with educational standards, the morality of youth, the integrity of society, and the identity of our nations. This is a fascinating story, told here in consummate fashion, combining insight and anecdote, and learning with wit - a book for everyone interested in languages and the people who speak them.

Language Anxiety is the most erudite of all the recent books on the English language and its history to have appeared in the last decade...genuinely illuminating. * Seth Lerer, Modern Philology *
An impressive book making a persuasive case, with a wealth of evidence being presented from many domains. * Year's Work in English Studies *
Machan's work is perhaps as valuable for the extraordinary assembly of historical commentary on language change as for his essential thesis that language anxiety is symptomatic of anxiety about other major tumultuous events in society, including the demise of national identity through immigration, social dissolution in general, or the shoring up of power and privilege by those who already have it. It is a truly fascinating book. * Discourse and Society *
...an admirable sweep and a nutritious density * Stephen Poole, The Guardian *
This is an excellent book. The subject matter is extremely interesting, the book is well-written, and the arguments are carefully crafted. * Marc Pierce, University of Texas at Austin, writing in eLanguage (the Journal of the Linguistic Society of America) *

ISBN: 9780199232123

Dimensions: 241mm x 162mm x 20mm

Weight: 672g

314 pages