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Talk Is Cheap: Sarcasm, Alienation, and the Evolution of Language
 
 
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Talk Is Cheap: Sarcasm, Alienation, and the Evolution of Language [Hardcover]

John Haiman (Author)

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Book Description

0195115244 978-0195115246 March 26, 1998
Putting aside questions of truth and falsehood, the old "talk is cheap" maxim carries as much weight as ever. Indeed, perhaps more. For one need not be an expert in irony or sarcasm to realize that people don't necessarily mean what they say. Phrases such as "Yeah, right" and "I couldn't care less" are so much a part of the way we speak--and the way we live--that we are more likely to notice when they are absent (for example, Forrest Gump). From our everyday dialogues and conversations ("Thanks a lot!") to the screenplays of our popular films (Pulp Fiction and Fargo), what is said is frequently very different from what is meant.

Talk is Cheap begins with this telling observation and proceeds to argue that such "unplain speaking" is fundamentally embedded in the way we now talk. Author John Haiman traces this sea-change in our use of language to the emergence of a postmodern "divided self" who is hyper-conscious that what he or she is saying has been said before; "cheap talk" thus allows us to distance ourselves from a social role with which we are uncomfortable. Haiman goes on to examine the full range of these pervasive distancing mechanisms, from clich�s and quotation marks to camp and parody. Also, and importantly, this text highlights several new ways in which the English language is evolving (and has evolved) in response to our postmodern world view. In other words, this study shows us how what we are saying is gradually separating itself from how we say it.

As provocative as it is timely, the book will be fascinating reading for students of linguistics, literature, communication, anthropology, philosophy, and popular culture.

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Editorial Reviews

Review


"Haiman's ideas on the nature of plain (sincere) and unplain language (including sarcasm, politeness, euphemism, affectation) and the types and causes of unplain language are fascinating and should interest advanced students, faculty, and professionals."--Choice


"Haiman's book represents the very best kind of work [being done] in cultural studies today. It constitutes a provocative--and refreshingly unpretentious--inquiry into human behavior (mainly linguistic but also non-linguistic)....A conceptually coherent whole that is nothing less than brilliant. Not to mention a terrifically good read. The book is dazzling in terms of the range of scholarship and documentation it draws on....It is altogether original in what it proposes and how it goes about its performance."--Suzanne Fleischman, French Department, University of California at Berkeley


"Extremely appealing in its style and its use of examples from the daily life of American culture, but...also enriched by comparisons with other languages and cultures. While the style makes the ideas accessible to a wide audience, the scholarship runs broad and deep; [this book] is firmly based on the classics of linguistics, anthropology, philosophy, and sociology....It made me think about a lot of old things, and a lot of everyday things, in a new way."--Joan Bybee, Department of Linguistics, University of New Mexico


--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

About the Author

John Haiman is at Macalester College.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
Whatever our social or psychological purposes in being sarcastic, from a purely linguistic or grammatical point of view, we are doing two things at once: we are communicating an ostensible message to our listeners but at the same time we are framing this message with a commentary or metamessage that says something like "I don't mean this: in fact, I mean the exact opposite." Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
stylized intonation, agreement hierarchy, ostensible message, cardinal vowels, double articulation
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Walter Mitty, Library of Congress, Susan Sontag, Woody Allen, Clint Eastwood, Garry Trudeau, Harry Truman, Old English, United States, American English, Dave Barry, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Charlie Brown, George Bush, Humphrey Bogart, James Bond, Lake Wobegon, Norman Dog, Saturday Night Live, Bruce Feirstein, Colin Morris, Dale Cooper, First Amendment, Flex Crush, Isaac Babel
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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