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10 - Corrupt Language and a Corrupt Body Politic, or the Disunion of Words and Things

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2012

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Summary

Anselmo

We are a nation of word-killers: hero, veteran, tragedy, – Watch the great words go down.

Carl

The language grows like that.

Anselmo

At least, it changes.

Ricardo

Corruption, too, is a kind of development – it depends on the view-point. It depends on whether

You are the word, or the worm; and whose is the ultimate society.

Edna St. Vincent Millay, “Conversation at Midnight”

Emerson's dictum in Nature – “The corruption of man is followed by the corruption of language” – is a commonplace (ELA, 22). George Marsh in Lectures on the English Language offers a variant of the commonplace that reorders the relationship Emerson posits: “The depravation of a language is not merely a token or an effect of the corruption of a people, but corruption is accelerated, if not caused by the perversion and degradation of its consecrated vocabulary” (ML, 647). The corruption Emerson describes merely affects the language: “new imagery ceases to be created” and “words lose all power to stimulate the understanding or the affections.” The corruption Marsh describes is more ominous in its consequences: “Every human speech has its hallowed dialect, its nomenclature appropriated to the service of sacred things, the conscience, the generous affections, the elevated aspirations, without which humanity is not a community of speaking men, but a herd of roaring brutes” (ibid.). The corruption of language is followed by a return to violence and anarchy – to civil war. Marsh published his lectures in 1859.

Type
Chapter
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Representative Words
Politics, Literature, and the American Language, 1776–1865
, pp. 348 - 371
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1993

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