You Talkin' To Me?: The Unruly History of New York English: The Dialects of North America
Autor Whiteen Limba Engleză Hardback – 24 sep 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190657215
ISBN-10: 0190657219
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 211 x 147 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria The Dialects of North America
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190657219
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 211 x 147 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria The Dialects of North America
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Accessibly written, deeply researched, and appropriately critical, this book is a gem about the American city that has arguably had more of an effect on American speech than any other. The book could be profitably used in courses not solely focused on New York City (NYC), because it illustrates so many wide-ranging principles of historical linguistics, sociolinguistics, and the relationship between language and place.
You Talkin' To Me? puts a good deal of entertaining meat on the phonetic bones.
Leading with its intellectual elbow in explanations of everything from Manhattan street names to the accents in World of Warcraft, this imaginative and teacherly account of how urbanites speak indirectly offers an account of how they live.
A colorful account — so colorful I cannot quote the opening lines here — of New York history, class, and culture as well as language.
"You Talkin' to Me?" also goes far beyond linguistics, using New York speech to illuminate American culture, history and social class.
The boisterous, jovial narrative tells how the developing city's newspapers and pulp novels introduced a new vocabulary to Americans, from 'con man' to 'street-walker,' 'kick the bucket' and 'go on a bender.'
This book takes in a lot of territory, all solidly researched and footnoted. But dry? Fuhgeddaboutit. White is particularly entertaining when she discusses underworld slang from the city's 'sensitive lines of business' and she's also good on song lyrics, from Tin Pan Alley days to hip-hop.
As anyone who has had a conversation with me in recent days will attest, the book is a remarkable repository of factoids for enlivening a dinner party or for filling the longueurs at the coffee machine.
Greatly entertaining...
E.J. White of Stony Brook University celebrates the disputatious, never-let-them-call-you-a-sucker language that is New York English
[You Talkin' to Me?] is a heartfelt tribute to, and insightful inquiry into, everyday speech in New York City.
There are many terrific examples of New York speech throughout this text and White contextualizes them all extremely well. Highly recommended.
You Talkin' To Me? offers a delightful eavesdrop of conversations over the centuries, paying particular attention to the city's unmistakable dialect and why it has proceeded to earn such derision.
Sassy and colloquial, energetic and profane, You Talkin' to Me? is also packed with erudition, color, and history — a magnificent tribute to its unruly subject.
E. J. White calls New York English 'unruly,' and who will disagree? Dialects jostle one another on the subways and shout over the blaring horns and rumbling trains. In You Talkin' to Me? White takes a big bite out of New York English, spits away the seeds of stereotype, and — given the unique relationship between language and culture — gets to the core of what the City is all about.
As a native New Yorker and a sociolinguist, I thought I knew a fair amount about New York City English. But I learned so much more from reading You Talkin' to Me?! And if you're a New Yorker yourself, or know them and love them, you'll get a lot of ammunition here: New Yorkers' ways of talking are just fine, thank you, and E. J. White will explain why. You'll learn a lot, and enjoy every moment while you are learning it.
New York City has an extraordinarily rich culture, and the history of that culture lives in its language, from the names of its streets to the lyrics of its Broadway musicals to the slang of its many criminal underworlds. E. J. White celebrates the unique creativity, humanity and humor of this diverse city. You Talkin' to Me? tells more than the story of New York. It tells the story of New Yorkers.
You Talkin' To Me? puts a good deal of entertaining meat on the phonetic bones.
Leading with its intellectual elbow in explanations of everything from Manhattan street names to the accents in World of Warcraft, this imaginative and teacherly account of how urbanites speak indirectly offers an account of how they live.
A colorful account — so colorful I cannot quote the opening lines here — of New York history, class, and culture as well as language.
"You Talkin' to Me?" also goes far beyond linguistics, using New York speech to illuminate American culture, history and social class.
The boisterous, jovial narrative tells how the developing city's newspapers and pulp novels introduced a new vocabulary to Americans, from 'con man' to 'street-walker,' 'kick the bucket' and 'go on a bender.'
This book takes in a lot of territory, all solidly researched and footnoted. But dry? Fuhgeddaboutit. White is particularly entertaining when she discusses underworld slang from the city's 'sensitive lines of business' and she's also good on song lyrics, from Tin Pan Alley days to hip-hop.
As anyone who has had a conversation with me in recent days will attest, the book is a remarkable repository of factoids for enlivening a dinner party or for filling the longueurs at the coffee machine.
Greatly entertaining...
E.J. White of Stony Brook University celebrates the disputatious, never-let-them-call-you-a-sucker language that is New York English
[You Talkin' to Me?] is a heartfelt tribute to, and insightful inquiry into, everyday speech in New York City.
There are many terrific examples of New York speech throughout this text and White contextualizes them all extremely well. Highly recommended.
You Talkin' To Me? offers a delightful eavesdrop of conversations over the centuries, paying particular attention to the city's unmistakable dialect and why it has proceeded to earn such derision.
Sassy and colloquial, energetic and profane, You Talkin' to Me? is also packed with erudition, color, and history — a magnificent tribute to its unruly subject.
E. J. White calls New York English 'unruly,' and who will disagree? Dialects jostle one another on the subways and shout over the blaring horns and rumbling trains. In You Talkin' to Me? White takes a big bite out of New York English, spits away the seeds of stereotype, and — given the unique relationship between language and culture — gets to the core of what the City is all about.
As a native New Yorker and a sociolinguist, I thought I knew a fair amount about New York City English. But I learned so much more from reading You Talkin' to Me?! And if you're a New Yorker yourself, or know them and love them, you'll get a lot of ammunition here: New Yorkers' ways of talking are just fine, thank you, and E. J. White will explain why. You'll learn a lot, and enjoy every moment while you are learning it.
New York City has an extraordinarily rich culture, and the history of that culture lives in its language, from the names of its streets to the lyrics of its Broadway musicals to the slang of its many criminal underworlds. E. J. White celebrates the unique creativity, humanity and humor of this diverse city. You Talkin' to Me? tells more than the story of New York. It tells the story of New Yorkers.
Notă biografică
E. J. White lives in New York with her dog, Victor, and her cat, Aaron Purr. She teaches media studies and the history of the English language at Stony Brook University. She holds degrees from Princeton, Yale, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.