[EDLING:844] RE: educated speaker

Wini Davies wid at ABER.AC.UK
Thu Jun 9 22:31:20 UTC 2005


Thanks. I'll try mailing Dick Hudson to ask him about this.

Wini.


-----Original Message-----
From: owner-edling at ccat.sas.upenn.edu
[mailto:owner-edling at ccat.sas.upenn.edu]On Behalf Of Phil Norman
Sent: 09 June 2005 16:48
To: edling at ccat.sas.upenn.edu
Subject: [EDLING:842] RE: educated speaker


Hi

I know of a paper that Professor Dick Hudson sent to a conference in Paris
(but did not present in person) some years ago. In that he defined a number
of features of Standard and non-standard grammatical constructions that
might easily relate to what John Honey is calling 'educated' speech. The
term 'educated' seems highly problematic in this context. Contexts such as
audience, purpose and content can dictate variations in grammar and lexis
that rarely trouble or excite many listeners. It seems that varied
expectation is more the issue.

I do not know the whereabouts of Dick Hudson's paper but it should not be
hard to track down.

Phil Norman
(University of Plymouth. UK)

________________________________

From: owner-edling at ccat.sas.upenn.edu on behalf of Wini Davies
Sent: Thu 09/06/2005 14:38
To: edling at ccat.sas.upenn.edu
Subject: [EDLING:840] educated speaker



Does anyone know of any literature on the subject of the 'educated speaker'?
The term occurs frequently (e.g. specific variants of English are described
as typical of the usage of an educated speaker), but I've come across very
few attempts to define the term (in fact the only one I've come across is
the controversial one by John Honey in Language is Power). I'd be grateful
for references to any literature on the topic (or just any opinions).


Dr Wini Davies,
Uwch-ddarlithydd mewn Almaeneg/Senior Lecturer in German,
Adran Ieithoedd Ewropeaidd/Dept of European Langs,
PCA/UWA,
Aberystwyth,
SY23 3DY,
Cymru/Wales.

Tel: 01970-622557
Fax: 01970-622553
www.aber.ac.uk/eurolangs/staff/wid.shtml



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