Often, language is considered to be degenerating due to increasingly widespread use of text-speak and shorthand. However, the use of shorthand allows more information to be spread in a shorter amount of time. Nonetheless, people continue to worry that text-speak is ruining the world. Perhaps they worry so much, they overcompensate and use “pretentious words”, as George Orwell calls them. Orwell actually dislikes the overly grandiloquent ways of writing, because he finds them silly and inefficient. Writers spend so much time, and waste much of their reader’s time, by using over-used words and phrases in attempts to sound intelligent and credible, despite sometimes saying nothing of importance. On the flip side, it is important to consider whether modern society spends so much time trying to be efficient, it begins to lack depth.
We are so constantly rushing around, that our interactions are quick and only extract the bare essentials. Ray Bradbury portrays a world in which everyone is content enough to speed about with their business that they stop caring for one another. They are no longer able to have deep, meaningful conversations and are no longer interested in what they themselves think, let alone those around them! The movement from spoken word to shorthand and text-speak are not the sole culprits. Many claim that we are mixing up a technological world with reality. Or, are we living in a reality that is over infused with technology?
So, really, is language evolving or devolving?
There is no clear cut answer. As Orwell says, “language merely reflects existing social conditions”(Orwell 10). Language evolves with the times, and current times seem to demand faster paced communication. In regards to efficiency, text speak and short hand are a good development. In regards to the future of our social relations, emotional wellbeing, and our abilities to think deeply and complexly…idk.Works Cited:
Bradbury, Ray. Fahrenheit 451. New York: Ballantine, 1953. Print.
Postman, Neil. Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business. New York: Viking, 1985. Print.
Hmmm...you mention our ability to think deeply and in complex ways. This notion reminds me of 1984, which Cade brought up in class today. The one character in that novel who really understands what the totalitarian regime, under "Big Brother" is hoping to accomplish with it's new language--Newspeak--is named Syme. He points out that having fewer words actually limits our ability to THINK about the ideas those words stand for.
ReplyDeleteI can definitely see why. However, on the flip side, does excess words, like Orwell explained in Politics in the English Language, hide meaning, or don't allow us to think for ourselves?
DeleteThere's the double-edged sword of it all...we need access to enough words to be able to create distinctions/think in a complex way. However, those same words, used incorrectly or in a slapdash way, are easily turned into a tasty, yet meaningless, word salad.
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