Disclaimer

This blog was made as an outlet for me to spew my opinions of the daily blunders of human kind. It is fully intended to spark heated debates & all out cyber fist fights and also to shed a little light on things that make me scratch my head in wonderment. You don't have to agree with my opinions but at the very least you should get a good laugh out of them. And remember, if you get offended by anything on this blog, that is your choice, my intentions are not to offend anyone, just to get you a little riled up for a minute!

Friday, December 19, 2014

The Once and Future Language, Part 2

Okay, I am back for part 2 of my ramblings about the evolution of the English language…As mentioned in Part 1, I took this History of the English Language class a few years ago in one of my last semesters of college and had to right a couple of research essays to complete the course.  Since posting Part 1 a couple of weeks ago, I ran across a perfect example of what I was talking about in Part 1.  I read an article that discussed the most commonly used words in 2014.  The most used word in the last year was “bae”…what the fudge is that supposed to be??  I guess it’s a “word” to describe one’s significant other but I always thought that words like “partner” or “boyfriend/girlfriend” or “lover” were ways to refer to a special person in one’s life…I guess I’m just old fashioned (or maybe just old) and not up to speed on my 21st century lingo.

As the term seems to have been coined by teens and early 20-somethings I would say this is a classic example of a new generation making changes to the "norm"…but this isn't about the younger generations coming along and stirring the pot of all that is good and well in the world so back to my essay...

Anyway, as a music major, I was able to integrate the evolution (yes I really just used a scientific term in an opinion post…) of western music into the second of my required essays for this class.  Unlike the first essay, which was more of a specific depiction of the growth and digression of the English language (and can be found here), this essay is more of a contrast-and-compare narrative.  It was also used as a summary for each student’s thoughts on the class.

Again my disclaimer: this is a formal essay complete with source list (I believe they are still calling it a bibliography) and references…read at your own risk! ;)

Originally written in April 2012

            I am a music major.  I would take music classes all day long for the rest of my life if I could!  Unfortunately, even music majors have to take some non-music classes.  It has been nearly 10 years since I have taken an English class and although I feel I can write well and have a good sense of proper speech and grammar, English has never been a strong subject for me.  I am a slow reader and don’t really like to read much.  Because of this I have avoided literature classes as much as possible, however, as I near the completion of my Bachelor Degree at Dixie State (University), I find myself in need of some upper division non-music electives.  I decided to take the History of English class as one of those electives.
           
There are a few reasons why I chose this class over some others that were being offered.  First of all, the course description made it sound interesting.  Many of the other available courses sounded like they may just bore me to tears!  I have difficulty staying interested in things that aren’t my main area of study so I felt it very important to choose a class that I could stay interested in throughout the semester.  Luckily I have stayed interested in this class and even enjoyed it.  Although, I will admit that at times, the amount of reading required has been very overwhelming and hard to get through!

            Another reason I chose the History of English course is that it was offered online.  With several other classes, full-time work, and a son, my time is already spread pretty thin and the ability to complete a 3 credit class at home and at my convenience was very appealing.  This class carries a pretty heavy workload as far as the weekly reading goes, but being able to work the class around my schedule makes it worth it.   
           
The main reason I chose this class is that I wanted to see how the evolution of the English language (and language in general) compares to the evolution of music.  There are many similarities in the ways that both music and language have developed over the centuries.  One of the most obvious similarities that I have discovered in this class is that the innovations and developments that have shaped both music and language are nearly identical.  For example, in the 14th century, Chaucer transformed Middle English and began to use it in ways never before seen.  “Although he did not coin many new words, he deployed an emerging vocabulary in a new and critically effective way” (Lerer 84). 
           
Fast forward several hundred years to the mid-19th century and you have the same thing happening in the music world.  One of the most famous composers in history, Richard Wagner, was transforming the way music was composed and performed.  Like Chaucer, Wagner took the elements that were available to him and found new ways to put them together to create a new element.  “Wagner found his own unique musical language…Wagner experimented with modulation and the key system, discovering ways of moving seamlessly to the remotest of keys with enormous emotional effect” (Burrows 252).

           Another similarity I discovered between the histories of music and English is that there are a few “chosen” ones who have had such a great impact in their developments, that, they now reign as symbols over them.  Shakespeare created hundreds, maybe thousands of new words in his time thereby expanding the language and making it accessible to many more citizens.  He also began to use language in a theatrical setting which was a way to communicate with people that had not been used before.  Now, if someone mentions theater, most people immediately think of Shakespeare.  After learning about Shakespeare, I decided that Mozart was the “Shakespeare of Music”.  Having written over 600 compositions in under 30 years, Mozart’s contribution to music is very similar to Shakespeare’s contribution to English.  Both were such gifted, prolific writers and they each laid the foundations for future developments of their respective fields.
           
I really enjoyed learning how, from its beginning, English has been a kind of language “soup”.  I didn’t know that it was part of the Germanic family of languages so I found that very interesting.  I never realized how much the Latin and French languages influenced early English either.  I enjoyed learning how new patterns were developed by the translation of French phrases into English and also how the culture was divided by language.  Just as in the 13th century when English was the language of the common people, French was the language of the upper class and government, and Latin was the language of the church, I think that even today, culture can be divided and labeled by its “voice”.  Take a modern city such as New York, New York.  In that one city, there has to be at least 10 different “voices”, each based on social status and probably ethnicity.  In this case, it isn’t always different languages that define the classes but different dialects of languages.  It’s like culture in 3 voices on a much smaller scale.

            One of the things I enjoyed most about this class is that I can, in a way, step back in time and imagine what it may have been like to exist before all the modern conveniences we now enjoy.  500 years ago, you couldn’t just send an email or make a quick phone call…you may not have been able to walk up to someone on the street and just start a conversation.  That person may not even speak the same language as you, or worse, they may be in a different social class and it could be against the rules to talk to them.  How lucky are we to live in the time that we do when a fair portion of the world speaks the same language and communication is such an easy feat to achieve…or, are we really lucky at all?

            As strange as it sounds, I enjoyed writing my essays for this class.  My first essay was about the potential future of the English language and how it seems to be digressing into an unrecognizable blend of syntax and rhetoric.  With the population of the Earth nearing 7 billion, it seems like a good idea to have a universal language that is a well pureed mix of languages from across the world but with that, we lose the purity and beauty of what I would call native languages.  That is one thing that I love about music.  No matter where you go or what language you may speak, music is universal.  Styles vary across the world, but the elements don’t change.  Middle C is middle C regardless, has been for hundreds of years and will continue to be for hundreds more.  As I worked on my first essay, I was saddened to learn how badly “pure” English has been tainted over the last 30-40 years.  Of course, English in its earliest form was a blend of French, Latin, and English so the definition of pure English varies depending on who you are talking to, but anyone who is old enough to remember a time without computers would likely agree that the language has taken a brutal beating over the last few decades.

            In closing, I will say that I definitely learned more about our spoken language and its journey over the last millennium.  I have been able to use what I know about the history and development of western music to help me understand the evolution of English.  I find that the similarities between music and language are astonishing and I have enjoyed comparing them.  Language and music go hand in hand and form the basis and identity of every culture on the planet; as language and music change, culture changes and as culture changes, the world changes. 




Sources

1.     Lerer, Seth. Inventing English: A Portable History of the Language. New York: Columbia UP, 2007. Print.
2.     Burrows, John, ed. Classical Music. New York: Metro, 2010. Print.
3.     Bonds, Mark Evan. A History of Music in Western Culture: Combined Volume. 3rd ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2010. Print. 

Sunday, December 7, 2014

The Once and Future Language (Part 1)

Oh man I have been universally absent from the blog world for the last year and a half!  I promise I am trying hard to get back to posting witty nonsense every week or two.  Until I have a chance to come up with some new content though I will share with you some randomness that may interest you or it may just bore you to tears of agony.  Either way, I’m putting it out there!!

I was bored for about a millisecond today and decided to go back and read through some of my college papers.  I took this class in the spring 2012 semester called The History of the English Language.  It was an online class so instead of in-person discussions, we wrote…a lot!  Fine by me, I don’t like people well enough to sit in a class and argue with them about why their shorthand, chicken-scratch version of writing and speaking is BS so writing was no problem!

We were required to do a bit of research and come up with 2 essays discussing a certain assigned topic.  My assigned topic was something along the lines of comparing and contrasting Old, Middle, and Modern English.  Sounds terrible but it was actually quite fun.  I don’t really love research (unless it’s a topic I am voluntarily researching) but we were only required to have 3 sources so it wasn’t so bad.  I decided to go with the minimum of 3 and build the rest of my essay on my own opinions and experiences.  I should mention that I was one of, or quite possibly, the oldest person in the class and therefore about the only one that remembers a day and age without the internet and cell phones at the ready.

Anyway, I decided that I would simply share my essays with you all in a 2 part post.  There are so many problems in the world today that I could discuss, but I chose instead to simply throw something that goes virtually ignored out there for you all to toss around…or run away from…whatever!  Here you go!

Warning: this is a formal essay complete with source list (I believe they are still calling it a bibliography) and references…read at your own risk! ;)

(Originally written on March 14, 2012)

Of Context and Culture: The Future of Our Language

            What is language?  Simply put, it is the collection and use of words that are used for communication between people.  We all know that language is in fact, much more complicated than that however.  Language is indeed our means of communication but it is constantly being shaped and influenced by culture, beliefs, ethnic diversity, scientific advancement, movement of people, war and conflict, and social influences.  Technological innovations such as email and text messaging have likely affected the evolution of communication and language more than any other events in history; perhaps even more so than the Norman invasion of England in 1066! 
           
            Coupled with the incessant need for instant gratification and sheer laziness, these innovations have caused a rapid change in the way the English language is used today and leads to the question: is our language un-evolving?  Is the English of the future going to look more like Old and Middle English than it does our current modern language?  Or, will it be a myriad of words from various languages that are referred to collectively as English? 

            The answer to each of these questions is yes.  Rather than un-evolving, our language is just continuing to evolve as it has for at least 15 centuries now.  The only difference now is that it is changing much quicker than it has in the past.  Unlike in prior centuries, the speed with which people can now move from place to place and communicate with each other is such that languages are able to evolve over the course of a lifetime rather than over a few centuries. 

            Fifty, twenty, possibly even as few as ten years ago the art of communication was much different that it is today.  Back then communication took time.  It could take hours to sit and write a letter to someone, not to mention the three to seven days it took for the post office to deliver the letter.  Talking on the telephone meant confining oneself to a space equal to the length of the phone cord (driving and talking on the phone at the same time was not an option!).  Email wasn’t invented or available to the public yet and cell phone and internet use were so limited that they had very little influence on language and communication. 
           
            Then something happened.  The advent of and public accessibility to computers and the internet changed everything.          The age of electronic communication had begun.
             
            Email and text messaging have expedited changes in language and communication. People are constantly looking for ways to converse with each other more quickly and with less effort.  In The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language, David Crystal said “They [electronic messages] are preferred over other methods [of communication] because they can be the most economical way of sending or receiving information…they do not require the participants to engage in time-consuming rituals of a phatic kind (asking about health, family, weather, etc…).  In other circumstances, a conversation which omitted such pleasantries would be considered rude.” (Crystal, 392).  It may be rude, but the shortened condensed version of conversation used in electronic communication gets rid of time wasting chit chat as people speed about, living life in the fast lane.

            This “quick-fix” approach to communication has lead to irreversible changes in the English language.  Those changes include (among other things): the use of acronyms as words, the use of numbers in place of letters or groups of letters that sound similar to the number, the exclusion of vowels and consonants in order to shorten words, and the combination of two or more words to create one shorter all-inclusive word.
           
            The lengthy list of acronyms that now function as words includes IDK, OMG, NBD, & LOL, but the list goes on and on.  These are just a few of the new “words” that are commonly used in the English language today.  The use of these acronyms as replacements for standard phrases like "I don't know" and "no bid deal" is a daily practice for many people, but these new “words” are just as confusing to many people as Old & Middle English because they are unfamiliar. To older generations, the English of the future may make little or no sense, just like older forms of English make no sense (to most of us).
           
            It could be said that many of the words and/or abbreviations that have worked their way into our current language more closely resemble words from the time of Caedmon and Old English than of the 21st century.  Like in words from the time of Caedmon, vowels are used but don’t seem to be positioned in a way that can be easily pronounced.  However, as with Old English or any other language, if the context is known and the reader understands the vocabulary being used, they can easily decipher the message. 
            Other ways that the English language is changing is through the use of numbers in place of letters that sound similar to the number and the exclusion of vowels.  For example, the word tomorrow is often spelled 2mro in text messages or emails.  This spelling not only replaces a group of letters with a number that is pronounced the same way, but it also shows the exclusion of nearly every vowel in the word.  Another example, the word anyone, is often replaced with n e 1 in order to shorten the time it takes to create a text message.  Other examples include great (gr8), see you later (c u l8r), and by the way (btw).  Initially, these spellings simply made it quicker and easier to type a message on a the tiny keypad of a cell phone but with hundreds of millions of people worldwide using these on daily basis, the English language is changing right under our noses (or perhaps our fingertips).
           
            Omission of consonants is becoming more common in English.  The suffix “-ing” is rarely pronounced properly in today’s English.  More often than not, the “g” is left off and the pronunciation ends up as “-in”.  A few examples of this are: walking (walkin), wondering (wonderin), and thinking (thinkin).  According to dictionary.com, this variation of “-ing” was used occasionally in Middle English, however, it is probably safe to say that regular use of “-in” instead of “-ing” didn’t occur until the mid to late 20th century.
           
            Another process that is noticeably changing English is the combining of two or more words to create a shorter more inclusive word.  Common examples of this include Idunno (I don’t know), gonna (going to), gotta (got to), and whatchadoin (what are you doing?).  It could be said that this is a blatant display of both laziness and the “do more in less time” mentality that many people live with.
            Although they may have had the greatest impact on the evolution of the English language, the reasons listed above are not solely to blame for the vast, rapid changes it has endured.  Prior to the 20th century, most people were limited to their native lands.  Aside from invasions and conquests, people kept to their homelands and their cultures remained untainted (or at least less tainted by outside influences).  Passage by ship or horse drawn carriage was the only means of travel available.  As a result, languages also remained more pure and changed at a much slower rate. 

            Advancements in travel, in addition to mass communication, the internet, etc, have had a great impact on how people, and therefore language and culture, spread out across the planet.  Yet these developments that have helped spread the English language across the world may be the very things that endanger it in the future.  In a 2008 article for Forbes.com, Nicholas Ostler writes “English is not thereby immune to the principles of language survival. Above all, it is notable that beyond the 330 million or so native speakers, perhaps twice as many more use it as a second language.  The community of over 600 million second-language speakers, who make English pre-eminent as a world language, also make it vulnerable in the long term.” 

            Ostler goes on to say that “In sum, the world in the next few generations is likely to see greater multilingualism and less English-backed bilingualism. We can learn the long view from language history, but it may be a hard lesson.”  He is illustrating that because people can move about so freely, the English language is being infiltrated by words from other languages to the point that eventually, it will exist as a generic world-language rather than a specific mother-tongue.
            Although it is unlikely that such an extreme dilution of the language will occur in this lifetime, it is reasonable to state that the English language is already on a path toward globalization and becoming the tongue of the world.  Unless it is preserved by current native speakers, English as it has been known for the last few centuries will not exist in the future. 




Sources
1.     Ostler, Nicholas. "English's Bleak Future." Forbes. Forbes Magazine, 21 Feb. 2008. Web. 14 Mar. 2012. http://www.forbes.com/2008/02/21/future-english-chinese-tech-cx_no_language_sp08_0221lingua.html
2.     Graddol, David. The Future of English. London: British Council, 1997. Web. 14 Mar. 2012. http://www.britishcouncil.org/learning-elt-future.pdf
3.     Lerer, Seth. Inventing English: A Portable History of the Language. New York: Columbia UP, 2007. Print.
4.     Crystal, David. The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language. Cambridge England: Cambridge UP, 1995. Print.

5.     "-ing." Dictionary.com. Dictionary.com. Web. 15 Mar. 2012. http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/-ing?r=75