Synopses & Reviews
The Social Art is an engagingly written, highly accessible tour through the world of languages. Macaulay uses jokes, anecdotes, quotations, and examples to introduce readers to the full range of current linguistic knowledge, covering in 35 chapters, topics like language acquisition, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, dialects, conversation, narrative, swearing, and many others.
In this revised and expanded second edition, Macaulay brings the book up to date with the last decade of progress in linguistics, adding more American examples, and updating bibliographies. Two new chapters have been added, on theories of language development and on the evolution of language. The Social Art is perfect for general readers and students who want to learn about what it is that linguists do.
Review
Review of the previous edition: "To read Ronald Macaulay is to be party to a conversation with a thoroughly knowledgeable friend, in touch with current research, who neither talks down or above one's head, but shares. It is marvelously accessible and informative."--Dell Hymes, University of Virginia
Review of the previous edition: "As familiar and pedestrian as it seems, everyday speech conceals a world of mystery. Macaulay invites the reader to explore this world. ... Whether the topic is nursery rhymes, literature, dialects, rhetoric, or profanity, Macaulay sweeps aside the obvious and uncovers riddles and surprises. ... A delightful introduction to linguistics."--Booklist
Review of the previous edition: "[Macaulay] covers...just about every aspect of language you can imagine...[with] consummate, usually amusing examples of the topic at hand. ... He's a good synthesizer, citing interesting research."--The Los Angeles Times
Synopsis
This engagingly written, highly readable volume introduces lay readers to the fascinating world of language. Replete with jokes, anecdotes, quotations, and readily intelligible examples, it offers a painless entree to the full range of linguistic knowledge. In thirty-one brief chapters, Macaulay delves into such topics as language acquisition, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, social dialects, sex differences, writing, style, register, conversation, narrative, swearing, rhetoric, second language learning, and linguistic change. The reader comes away with a new appreciation of the pleasure to be derived from the study of this complex and uniquely human phenomenon.
About the Author
Ronald K. S. Macaulay is Emeritus Professor of Linguistics at Pitzer College. He is the author of
Language, Social Class and Education (1977),
Locating Dialect in Discourse (1991),
Standards and Variation in Urban Speech (1997), and
Talk that Counts: Age, Gender, and Social Class Differences in Discourse (OUP, 2005). The first edition of
The Social Art was published in 1995.