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Offensive Language: Taboo, Offence and Social Control

✍ Scribed by Dr Jim O’Driscoll


Publisher
Bloomsbury Academic
Year
2020
Tongue
English
Leaves
217
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Why do people take offence at things that are said? What is it exactly about an offending utterance which causes this negative reaction? How well motivated is the response to the offence? Offensive Language addresses these questions by applying an array of concepts from linguistic pragmatics and sociolinguistics to a wide range of examples, from TV to Twitter and from Mel Gibson to Donald Trump. Establishing a sharp distinction between potential offence and actual offence, Jim O'Driscoll then examines a series of case studies where offence has been caused, assessing the nature and degree of both the offence and the documented response to it. Through close linguistic analysis, this book explores the fine line between free speech and criminal activity, searching for a principled way to distinguish the merely embarrassing from the reprehensible and the censurable. In this way, a new approach to offensive language emerges, involving both how we study it and how it might be handled in public life.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Contents
Preface
Part I Offensive language and why it matters
1. Introduction
2. Theoretical and analytical apparatus
Part II Potential offence: Taboo language
3. Taboo language
4. Taboo words
5. Taboo reference
6. Taboo predication
Part III Actual offence: Case studies
7. Some more theoretical considerations
8. Offences against the person
9. Offences against β€˜the peace’ – and social control
10. Threats to social harmony – and social control
Part IV Reprise
11. Reporting offensive language
12. Social control and free speech
Notes
References
Index


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