Friday, January 27, 2006

Entry #1: Prescription vs. Description

In regards to how one ought to catalog language, there are two main schools of thought: the prescriptivists and the descriptivists. The former seek to preserve what they believe is the superior form of their language, while the latter view language as a natural phenomenon, and seek only to document and explain its behavior.

Linguistics, generally, began prescriptively (if we go back far enough, this means attempting to force Latin grammatical rules over English frames; this results in the multitude of style manuals and usage guides seen in any bookstore). Remember Rex Harrison in My Fair Lady (or, more accurately, Professor Henry Higgins in G.B. Shaw's Pygmalion)? A stodgy old British fellow, Higgins was obsessed with purifying the English language. The very first song Harrison (as Higgins) sings is "Why Can't the English...?," an hysterical rant on the state of speech in the UK, and how it is deplorable and deficient. In Higgins' mind, there is some such thing as Proper English, and those who don't speak it are wrong and stupid. This is the philosophy of a prescriptivist; one must prescribe how to speak, and those who don't follow these prescriptions are making mistakes, mistakes which must be corrected.

Descriptivism began (more or less) with Edward Sapir, an early 20th century scholar. His attempts to catalog various languages (which he had no previous familiarity with, unlike French or Spanish, etc) jumpstarted modern Linguistics. (I do not laud Sapir blindly, however. The Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis, a.k.a. Linguistic Determinism, lacks evidentiary and theoretical support). A drive to transcribe what the speaker speaks, rather than correct him. An directive to explain the behavior of all speech, rather than choose one mode as "proper." This overarching philosophy has guided the field up to this day, and debates still rage over it. David Foster Wallace's article "Authority and American Usage," (available as part of his collection Consider the Lobster, in stores now) is a well-written but ultimately misguided summary of the current state of affairs.

So, dear readers, how do you feel? Should language be preserved, kept as it is, or described as closely as possible, with minimal interference? You've probably guessed my take on the whole situation, but I'd love to hear from you. Remember, intelligent debate, not name-calling and fighting. Happy commenting!

3 Comments:

At 2/22/2006 8:29 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

i don't think one should fool with Mother Nature

 
At 2/22/2006 3:51 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

indeed, fooling with Mother Nature seems like a bad idea...but what about hurricanes? tornados? volcanos? earthquakes? mother nature is not benevolent all the time; perhaps she needs some prodding in the right direction now and then...

just some food for thought.

 
At 3/20/2006 11:59 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

seriously, i think minimal interference. because language, like life, holds its beauty and interest in its imperfection. am i following this correctly? like with the English language - there are all the Brit dialects, the American dialects (including Canadian) and each has its own unique sound. so document and categorize away, but let it flow freely and seek its own course.

 

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