Response to the Contested Language Forum

This 'Credo' essay responds to the Contested Terms Forum (Issue 6), exploring why the language used about ageing gives rise to arguments, and examining the particular pressures placed on academic and broader public discourse by geography, regionality, cultural context and, not least, age....

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Main Author: Helen Small
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Royal Danish Library 2023-06-01
Series:Age, Culture, Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tidsskrift.dk/ageculturehumanities/article/view/136176
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author Helen Small
author_facet Helen Small
author_sort Helen Small
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description This 'Credo' essay responds to the Contested Terms Forum (Issue 6), exploring why the language used about ageing gives rise to arguments, and examining the particular pressures placed on academic and broader public discourse by geography, regionality, cultural context and, not least, age. Drawing on Deborah Cameron's thinking about 'verbal hygiene', as it sheds light on the social context of all language use and the inevitability of divergent views about 'norms', the essay probes particular points of pressure on discourses of ageing at present. Two recent publications, Wendy Mitchell's What I Wish People Knew about Dementia (2022) and Pope Lonergan's I'll Die After Bingo (also 2022), help to unpack the importance of flexible attitudes to language within care settings. The essay then considers the focus on language as a defining feature of Humanistic study—an element of its critical 'deformation' (in the neutral sociological sense) by contrast with the Social and Medical Sciences. Attention is also given to the forms of flexibility required by literary criticism in its dealings with texts, which will often have historic, dramatic, psychological, emotional or other rationales for employing language that would rightly be rebuked in real-world social settings.
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spelling doaj.art-2849b7c85ba541ffa847a13474e9a5f92023-08-07T00:03:03ZengRoyal Danish LibraryAge, Culture, Humanities2373-54812023-06-01710.7146/ageculturehumanities.v7i.136176Response to the Contested Language ForumHelen Small0University of Oxford This 'Credo' essay responds to the Contested Terms Forum (Issue 6), exploring why the language used about ageing gives rise to arguments, and examining the particular pressures placed on academic and broader public discourse by geography, regionality, cultural context and, not least, age. Drawing on Deborah Cameron's thinking about 'verbal hygiene', as it sheds light on the social context of all language use and the inevitability of divergent views about 'norms', the essay probes particular points of pressure on discourses of ageing at present. Two recent publications, Wendy Mitchell's What I Wish People Knew about Dementia (2022) and Pope Lonergan's I'll Die After Bingo (also 2022), help to unpack the importance of flexible attitudes to language within care settings. The essay then considers the focus on language as a defining feature of Humanistic study—an element of its critical 'deformation' (in the neutral sociological sense) by contrast with the Social and Medical Sciences. Attention is also given to the forms of flexibility required by literary criticism in its dealings with texts, which will often have historic, dramatic, psychological, emotional or other rationales for employing language that would rightly be rebuked in real-world social settings. https://tidsskrift.dk/ageculturehumanities/article/view/136176Contested termsverbal hygieneage studiescare workliterary representations of old ageunderstanding dementia
spellingShingle Helen Small
Response to the Contested Language Forum
Age, Culture, Humanities
Contested terms
verbal hygiene
age studies
care work
literary representations of old age
understanding dementia
title Response to the Contested Language Forum
title_full Response to the Contested Language Forum
title_fullStr Response to the Contested Language Forum
title_full_unstemmed Response to the Contested Language Forum
title_short Response to the Contested Language Forum
title_sort response to the contested language forum
topic Contested terms
verbal hygiene
age studies
care work
literary representations of old age
understanding dementia
url https://tidsskrift.dk/ageculturehumanities/article/view/136176
work_keys_str_mv AT helensmall responsetothecontestedlanguageforum