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Pronunciation in Britain acts as an image of identity laden with social and cultural sensitivities. In 'Talking Proper' Lynda Mugglestone studies the shifts in attitudes to language (and in language itself) which, in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, came to influence the rise of many still current shibboleths of English speech, whether in terms of the 'dropped h' or the stated improprieties of the 'vulgar' as against the 'educated' speaker.
Showing how changing notions of acceptability were widely reflected in contemporary works of literature as well as those on language, the author examines the role which accent came to play in popular stereotypes of speaker as well as speech; the 'Cockney', the 'parvenu', the 'educated' or the 'lower class', the 'lady' and the 'gentleman' all make their appearance in the language attributes of the day, their social resonances regularly deployed in prescriptive attempts to standardize the spoken language.
The resulting notions about talking proper were firmly embedded in common nineteenth-century assumptions about gender, status, and education, laying the foundations for the Received Pronunciation of today and its distinctive socio-symbolic values.
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Subjects
Accents and accentuation, English language, Social aspects, Social aspects of English language, Social classes, Social life and customs, Speech and social status, Spoken English, Standardization, Variation, Great britain, social life and customs, English language, standardization, English language, spoken english, English language, social aspects, English language, accents and accentuation, English language, variation, Language and culture, Oral communication, Linguistics, Anglais (Langue), Anglais parlé, Langage et statut social, Mœurs et coutumes, Classes sociales, Manners and customs, Aussprache, Sozialstatus, Engels, Dialecten, Standaardtaal, Sociale status, HistoryPlaces
Great BritainShowing 6 featured editions. View all 6 editions?
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1
Talking Proper: The Rise of Accent As Social Symbol
2010, Oxford University Press
in English
128134169X 9781281341693
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2
Talking Proper: The Rise of Accent As Social Symbol
November 19, 2007, Oxford University Press, USA
Paperback
in English
- 2 edition
0199250626 9780199250622
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3
Talking Proper: The Rise of Accent As Social Symbol
2003, Ebsco Publishing
in English
0191554723 9780191554728
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Talking proper: the rise of accent as social symbol
2003, Oxford University Press
in English
- [2nd ed.].
0199250618 9780199250615
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5
"Talking Proper": The Rise of Accent as Social Symbol
May 15, 1997, Oxford University Press, USA
Paperback
in English
0198237065 9780198237068
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6
Talking proper: the rise of accent as social symbol
1995, Clarendon Press, Oxford University Press
in English
0198239483 9780198239482
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