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The Life of Slang, by Julie Coleman
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Bad-ass, bee's knees, and bomb-diffity - slang rules
Teachers, politicians, broadcasters, and parents complain of the slang-infested language of today's teenagers. But slang has been around for centuries, always troubling those who take a purist line on the English language. In this entertaining book, Julie Coleman traces the development of slang across the English-speaking world and explores why and how it flourishes. She makes use of a marvellous array of sources, including newly available online records of the Old Bailey, machine-searchable historical newspaper collections, slang users themselves, scholarly works, and the latest tweets. It is a book guaranteed to teach you some new words that you shold never use in polite company.
- Sales Rank: #3241732 in Books
- Published on: 2014-04-15
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 5.30" h x .80" w x 8.40" l, .98 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 374 pages
Review
Review from previous edition: "Enjoyable and succinct. Rarely, since Eric Partridge, has any scholar evinced such pleasure in the vulgar tongue... Coleman is a 'top banana'." --Robert McCrum, The Observer 04/03/2012
"Completely fascinating ... immensely enjoyable ... Coleman's thinking lifts this book above the usual semi-disposable level of writing about rude words." --James McConnachie, The Sunday Times 04/03/2012
"Coleman relishes slang in all its chewy, vigorous glory, and gives a sociological insight ... This book is the 'cat's whiskers'" --The Independent on Sunday 11/03/2012
About the Author
Julie Coleman was born in Coventry and attended Finham Park Comprehensive. She studied at Manchester University and King's College London, taught at Lund University in Sweden, and is now a Professor in the School of English at the University of Leicester. She has written several books about dictionaries.
Most helpful customer reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
A Wicked Analysis
By Rob Hardy
If you are a prim grammarian you detest slang. And yet you use it. Sure, you might not praise something as being "wicked," but you might let yourself go and say it was "fantastic." You're still using slang, but you are merely out of date. "Fantastic," strictly defined, refers of course to fantasies, but around 1938, teens began using it as a term of approval. In _The Life of Slang_ (Oxford University Press), professor of English Julie Coleman points out that teens did this all through the last century. "Wizard," "fabulous," "gnarly," and "radical" are among the words that got recruited from some other use to become trendy terms to show appreciation. Sometimes such terms popped up with no previous history; no one knows where "snazzy" came from, although the OED first cites it in 1931. And then there is "cool," which used to be cool and then was uncool until it became cool again. Coleman would be the first to recognize that her study of slang will go quickly out of date, and although she cites many historic documents purporting to bring people up to date on the latest word trends, hers is not a book to use for decoding what other people are saying nowadays. Rather, it is a longer view of why we have slang in the first place, who makes it, what keeps it going, and what purposes it serves. After all, the use of slang is commonplace in all modern societies, so there must be some reasons for it. Coleman's jaunty book has scads of examples (although "scads" as "heaps" is not here, but it is as slang for "dollars," whence OED implies the "heaps" definition came.) It ought to be fun for anyone who uses slang, and that's all of us.
Defining slang is difficult, and Coleman repeatedly stresses the importance of context. If "awesome" is in some dictionary of slang, it certainly deserves its place there, but "awesome" isn't itself slang, unless it is used that way, and it can be used in other ways as well. The classic syndrome of the older generation disapproving of the general behavior of the younger one might explain a lot about why slang is regarded as bad language, since young people make and use it to a high degree. Slang might be thought of as representing rebelliousness and nonconformity, but that is not the main function. "In use, slang is often much more about fitting in than rebelling. It's about saying the same thing as the rest of the group rather than about saying something new." Coleman is very good in the sections about how slang is spread, from newspapers to comic strips to movies to radio and television. The biggest shift in the world of slang and slang research is that slang gets used on the internet. Usually online slang is pretty much the same as spoken slang, researchers have found, but definitions that have stressed the use of slang as spoken language are now outdated. Typed communication, via e-mail or text or tweet, is very much closer to the way people speak than the way they produce formal written documents. Online slang has the same utility as spoken slang; it helps define a group, playing slang's social as well as communicative function. In addition, typed slang is usually quicker to type than standard terms, and in the middle of a video game battle, Coleman says, "superfluous key strokes could be a matter of virtual life and death." There are online slang dictionaries, which Coleman reviews in her professional capacity, with hope that such dictionaries could someday combine efforts of professional lexicographers and wiki inputs from slang users worldwide. The search functions of the internet have already been a useful tool in documenting the rise and prevalence of slang terms.
Nobody uses slang because they have to or because it impedes communication. As long as there has been language, slang has gotten the message across, and carried social signals as well. And slang is simply fun to use. The sense of fun is conveyed here in every chapter; Coleman may have mined the court records from the Old Bailey and yellowed newsprint or electronic archives for her considerable research, and the erudition is here. Her sense of humor and her delight in making obscure speech plain are key, though, in making the lessons fun, and many readers will agree that the book is def or even mega.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
A Slangish Celebration
By Paul Gelman
If there is a word I can use to describe this book, I would use the word "slangish" to describe it. Does such a word exist? Maybe.
If not, I will be considered the one to have invented it.
This book is about the natural history of slang, while in the second part Professor Coleman discusses in detail the history of English slang and the various slang types in the English-speaking world.
Her main argument is that it is extremely difficult to define what slang actually is, although she gives some criteria to help the reader with this. She says that those in favour of slang consider it creative and vibrant, while those who are opposed to it are thought of as unintelligent and have limited vocabularies. Slang is abot creating and maintaining a sense of group or personal identity, and among those groups one can find the military, jazz musicians and others.
There is a very good section about cant, meaning the language and terms used by the underworld, the language of beggars, criminals, politicians and many more. Teenagers are a great source of slang, and she lets us know that even teachers in Britain are familiar with the term "vanilla checks"( meaning boring clothes).
There are four stages in the development of slang and they are: creation, early development, adaptation and survival and spreading into wider use. Scholars choose on which of these four to focus. So, what are "prigs", "culls", "blosses"? They are slang words used in cant. "Whangdoodles" and "fixings" are two more words which originate in Early American Slang.
In one of the chapters, Charles Dickes makes his appearance, beacuse he toured America and wrote about certain slang words and terms he heard of in 1842. American English and slang have adopted many terms from various languagesspoken by immigrants, including French(prairie), Dutch(boss), German (sauerkraut) and Italian(pizza). American slang is "often held up as an emblem of the creativity and vigour of its users".
In my view, the best chapter of this book comes towards the end and is entitled: Leets to Lols:The Digital Age. This is about slang, computers and the Internet, Facebook and Tweeting or Twitter. Twitter terms, for example, "offer high-profile examples of the spread of new words and new usages through technologial means.
If slang was once considered to be a sign of poor breeding or poor taste, it now indicates that the speaker is fun-loving, youthful and in touch with the latest trend.
Slang is here to stay. It is definitely not the enemy of Standard English.
Read this book and you will enjoy each page of it.Lol !!!!!!!!!!!!
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
There's a reason this is published by OUP and not Simon & Schuster
By Jennifer Grey
I'll admit The Life of Slang surprised me. I'd expected to wade through the first chapters - dedicated to the definition of slang, its development, and spread - to get to the good bits at the end offering examples of slang from different ages and areas of the English-speaking world. Imagine my shock when I found my interest most engaged by that I'd dismissed as chore-reading, and the anticipated exploration of slang-terms (interesting as they may be in and of themselves) undermined by the dry presentation in which they were couched. Go figure.
Coleman's book both benefits and suffers from its inherent nature as an academic work. Everything is presented in the traditional format (here's what I'm going to say, here I am saying it, here's what I just said) and thoroughly end-noted, and the early chapters where she seeks to define and explain slang speak to her dept of research and knowledge on the subject. It's just the later bits, which I'm fairly certain were included as a kind of come-hither (they're what got me to pick this up, after all), that fail due to the author's tendency to cram all those fascinating words into one block paragraph and then endnote their meanings rather that unpack them one at a time like the jewels they are. Coleman's treatment of cant or teenage slang really is, as advertised, a survey: it glances there, then quickly away. More's the pity.
Logophiles of a more academic bent will likely find lots to love here, but I suspect the general word-lover might find this a bit of a hard row to hoe.
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