Does Southern speech suck?
Thom Harrison
THarriso at MAIL.MACONSTATE.EDU
Tue Apr 2 18:10:09 UTC 2002
The Essential Lenny Bruce (Ballantine Books, 1967, ed. John Cohen) records a
routine called "The Southern Sound" in which Lenny Bruce explains why Lyndon
Johnson could never be elected president.
A line that I can quote on the air goes, "As bright as any Southerner could
be, if Albert Einstein 'tawked lahk thayat, theah wouldn't be no bomb.'"
Thom
-----Original Message-----
From: Beverly Flanigan [mailto:flanigan at OAK.CATS.OHIOU.EDU]
Sent: Tuesday, April 02, 2002 12:39 PM
To: ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU
Subject: Re: Does Southern speech suck?
Newspaper columnists are a good source of pro and con comments on Southern,
hillbilly, black, etc. speech. I have an old column by James Kilpatrick
(politely decrying Black English) and one by Mike Royko (mocking BE so
viciously that I wonder why he was so uniformly praised after he died); and
a student recently gave me a column by Bob Sanders of the Opelika-Auburn
News. Sanders talks nostalgically about the loss of R-lessness in
southern kids and the loss of final R in his "hillbilly" kin (as in
'winders') and adds "Alas, we're all starting to sound like Peter Jennings."
And long before Clinton, negative comments appeared regularly on LBJ and
Jimmy Carter.
At 11:54 AM 4/2/02 -0500, you wrote:
>RonButters at AOL.COM wrote:
>>One of my colleagues sent me the following inquiry. Can anyone help? I am
>>momentarily (?) stumped.
>>
>>> One of my students wants to look at negative attitudes
>>> towards Southern speech for her next writing project but,
>>> although we can
>>> find plenty of linguistic analyses of it, we cannot find any emotional
>>> editorials either declaiming or supporting Southern speech. Any hints
>>> you could give us?
>
>I don't think you'd find a lot of editorials explicitly on this
>topic. However, you might find throwaway comments about southern
>speech in articles about the Bubbaization of US politics during the
>Clinton administration. I remember a lot of such articles when
>Clinton was first running, and some of them included comments about
>linguistic forms. Another place to look is for criticisms of Dan
>Rather's folksy (or pseudo-folksy?) expressions.
>
>--
>===========================================================================
===
>Alice Faber
faber at haskins.yale.edu
>Haskins Laboratories tel: (203) 865-6163
x258
>New Haven, CT 06511 USA fax (203)
865-8963
_____________________________________________
Beverly Olson Flanigan Department of Linguistics
Ohio University Athens, OH 45701
Ph.: (740) 593-4568 Fax: (740) 593-2967
http://www.cats.ohiou.edu/linguistics/dept/flanigan.htm
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