Think On My Words: Exploring Shakespeare's Language
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Average customer review:Product Description
‘You speak a language that I understand not.’ Hermione’s words to Leontes in The Winter’s Tale are likely to ring true with many people reading or watching Shakespeare’s plays today. For decades, people have been studying Shakespeare’s life and times, and in recent years there has been a renewed surge of interest into aspects of his language. So how can we better understand Shakespeare? How did he manipulate language to produce such an unrivalled body of work, which has enthralled generations both as theatre and as literature? David Crystal addresses these and many other questions in this lively and original introduction to Shakespeare’s language. Covering in turn the five main dimensions of language structure - writing system, pronunciation, grammar, vocabulary, and conversational style - the book shows how examining these linguistic ‘nuts and bolts’ can help us achieve a greater appreciation of Shakespeare’s linguistic creativity.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #46474 in Books
- Published on: 2008-02-21
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 266 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
‘In this authoritative and attractively written book David Crystal asks all the right questions about the language that Shakespeare used and the ways in which he used it. Here is a linguist who knows not only how words work but how they work in the theatre. Anyone who cares for Shakespeare will be informed and entertained by this intriguing and wide-ranging study.’ Stanley Wells
‘… a fascinating and very readable book … one that could be recommended to the Shakespeare novice.’ Stratford-upon-Avon Observer
'… he explores Shakespeare's linguistic art his grammar, his poetic brain and the ways in which he manipulated ordinary words, his building blocks, into the breathtaking poetry we have today.' Stratford-upon-Avon Herald
‘An accessible book examining the 'nuts and bolts' of Shakespeare's language thus seems timely, and David Crystal … is just the man to write it.’ Times Higher Education
'Crystal’s new book is a summation of his work on Shakespeare over many years, essentially a user-friendly book about language. An invaluable resource particularly for work in both language and literature at A Level.' Keith Davidson, Committee for Language in Education
About the Author
David Crystal is a writer, editor, lecturer and broadcaster. He is Honorary Professor of Linguistics at the University of Bangor.
Customer Reviews
Seale vp the Ship-boyes Eyes, and rock his Braines
Anyone who has heard David Crystal lecture in person or speak on the radio will recognize his infectious blend of enthusiasm and scholarship within a few pages of beginning this splendid book. Even as he gently shatters the myths we have probably all flirted with in some measure - that Shakespeare had the largest vocabulary of anyone who has ever lived, that he created half the words in English, that he has the most distinctive style of any author - you can't help but enjoy the lesson. Iconoclastic erudition is his forte.
Of course, we native English speakers are lucky in that Shakespeare's language is our language, with far fewer differences than you might think - although, like most people, I've sat through productions of his plays that might as well have been in a foreign language. While this kind of experience can put people off for life, it only takes one or two actors breathing meaning into the words right there in front of you to get you hooked. David Crystal never forgets that we are dealing with dramatic poetry, and his discussion of the pentameter is an object lesson in how to avoid getting bogged down in theory. As a piece of jargon it should be no scarier to children than "pentathlon". But whereas with pentathlon "we have no difficulty seeing the bridge between the term and what happens in the real world", the trouble with books on the pentameter is that "the real world is often not there at all." This is a deficit Crystal puts right by showing how the pentameter copes with a huge range of the spoken word, "incorporating the varied rhythms of natural speech while maintaining the required poetic discipline." You're not likely to see Crystal's conclusion - "The pentameter rules" - graffitied on a schoolboy's desk anytime soon, but his approach might just wake them up to what it's all about: the real world of performance.
Such an approach might also help resolve the vexed question of modernization, for example, whether to "translate" Shakespeare into "modern English" for the benefit of our youngsters (why do those who propose this sort of thing never reflect on why more adults don't spontaneously open their Collected Works in the evenings?). Crystal's view is clear: a better term would be "simplification". I agree. Reading Shakespeare in any case should always come after seeing it performed. Most of us - perhaps even Professor Crystal - would admit to bits we just don't get - complex ideas jemmied into a tight metrical space, grammatical niceties bulging over the pentameter waistband - but in a theatre a good actor will drag you through the linguistic thicket, and will deliver plenty of lines that you most definitely do get. That's the thing about drama - it's dramatic. Stick with it and you'll become, as David Crystal suggests, more and more fluent in "Shakespearean". As for the modernizing moaners, there's always someone who wants the moon on a stick.
Still, I never realized quite how many changes are made in order to create the modern editions we all read. Crystal uses the original Folio text throughout much of the book (as in the strapline above). However, these spellings and variants are not necessarily Shakespearean, since "an uncertain number of people stand between Shakespeare's original manuscript and the printed versions that have come down to us". Instead of "Shakespeare's language" a more precise description would be "the language used in Shakespearean texts", and Crystal's primary aim is "to explore the meaning and effect of the plays and poems by analysing the way the language - whoever originated it - has been used". This doesn't make him an anti-Stratfordian: uncertainty over whether Shakespeare wrote this particular word or phrase does not scale up into doubtful authorship of the plays.
The analysis of Shakespeare through the medium of grammar might seem to be a nightmare scenario - for both teachers and students - but Professor Crystal has the knack of both putting it in plain and startling terms and making us see its importance. "Grammar makes sense of language. That is what it is for. Words by themselves do not make sense. Individual words are too ambiguous, because their multiple meanings compete for our attention... Grammar reflects the way we think - more precisely, the way we process our thoughts - and the main unit in which we organize our thoughts is the sentence."
It is difficult to imagine being passionate about Shakespeare and being indifferent to his language. It's easier for an academic to be learned and yet uninspiring. And so, be grateful for a linguist of David Crystal's calibre who cares as much about the plays - both their performance and their poetry - as he does about their syntax and their vocabulary. "Economy of expression, the result always of a trading relationship between lexicon and grammar, is the hallmark of Shakespeare's linguistic creativity." Fortunately for us, when it comes to writing books for the lay reader, David Crystal is not too economical with his own time.
A feast of language
Don't let the cartoon cover fool you into thinking this is another catchpenny "Shakespeare's Language for Dummies". It's an elegant, compelling survey of everything you need to get more out of watching and reading Shakespeare.
If you want to be Shakespeared rightly...
If you want to be Shakespeared rightly and get to know in detail all the fascinating nuts and bolts (David Crystal's phrasing) of his delicious tongue told by the number 1 Shakespearean scholar, the book is not to be left unread, well...undevoured!!! As Sphex notes in his review, Professor's enthusiasm is infectious, and inviting in!
A fascinating admixture of most meticulous, accurate and informative research and a friendly, crisp, and entertainingly beautiful manner of delivery, Professor Crystal leaves nothing to be desired!
The book is a number one reference for anyone interested in Shakespeare, from Bardoholics to Englisholics.
I strongly recommend this must-read book, well... "Shakespeare's Words" too, and..."The Shakespeare Miscellany", and...well, all by Professor David Crystal!!!
By the way, did you know why Shakespeare's name is spelled the way it is spelled???



