Over 50 years ago, in 1961, the most respected American publisher of dictionaries broke its own long, conservative tradition by coming up with a dictionary that added over 100,000 new words to the American English lexicon, decisively getting rid of “artificial notions of correctness” and basing proper usage of the language on how it was actually spoken. With G. & C. Merriam’s audacious decision to formally assimilate slang into the language,
Webster’s Third New International Dictionary outraged academics and editorial writers alike and sparked what is now considered “the single greatest language controversy in American history.”
The monumental ruckus created in language circles by the
Webster’s Third is told with both erudition and verve by noted humanities writer and editor David Skinner in
The Story of Ain’t: America, Its Language, and the Most Controversial Dictionary Ever Published (HarperCollins Publishers, 368 pages). In this eminently entertaining account of the controversy, Skinner shows how Philip Gove, the editor of
Webster’s Third, set out to construct a modern, linguistically rigorous dictionary and how his critics—particularly the literary intellectual Dwight Macdonald who labeled the
Webster’s Third’s abandonment of the old standard of usage as “the unraveling of civilization”—fiercely sought to destroy it.
In an advance review of Skinner’s
The Story of Ain’t, bestselling author Simon Manchester says: “It takes true brilliance to lift the arid tellings of lexicographic fussing into the readable realm of the thriller and the bodice-ripper. With his riveting account…David Skinner has done precisely this, taking a fine story and honing it to popular perfection.”
Read David Skinner’s “Wars of Words: Dividing the world into prescriptivists and descriptivists” in WeeklyStandard.com now!ABOUT THE AUTHOR:David Skinner is a writer on language and culture. He is the editor of
Humanities magazine, which is published by the National Endowment for the Humanities, and is on the usage panel for the
American Heritage Dictionary. Formerly a staff editor at the
Weekly Standard, for which he still writes, and currently an editor of
Doublethink magazine, Skinner has written for the
Wall Street Journal, the
New Atlantis,
Slate, the
Washington Times, and the
American Spectator.
RELATED READING:In “A Literal Epidemic of Crutch Words,” an article that came out in the September 13, 2012 issue of
TheAtlanticWire.com, Jen Doll says that we are living in the midst of a crutch word epidemic in which people are wont to throw around excessively—and often incorrectly or meaninglessly—such words and phrases as “as it were,” “actually,” “basically,” “um, like,” and “apparently.” She then presents a list and her droll analysis of her own hate-favorite crutch words, among them “and so forth and so on,” “absolutely,” “definitely,” “exponentially,” “fantastic,” “going forward,” and “It is what it is.”
Read Jen Doll’s “A Literal Epidemic of Crutch Words” in TheAtlanticWire.com now!