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Profanity, Obscenity and the Media - Profanity, Obscenity & the Media (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,887
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Profanity, Obscenity and the Media - Profanity, Obscenity & the Media (Hardcover)
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This is the second volume of Melvin Lasky's The Language of
Journalism, praised as a "brilliant" and "original" study in
communications and contemporary language, and as "a joy to read."
It broke ground in focusing on the comparative styles and
prejudices of mainstream American and British newspapers, and in
its trenchant analysis of their systematic debasement in the face
of obligatory platitudes and compulsory euphemisms. Lasky's subtle
and richly detailed text documents the possibly terminal crisis
affecting honest, thoughtful, and independent journalism in the
Western world. It extends the research in his first volume, and
deepens the interpretation. It also adds the personal touch of both
wit and anecdote expressed by an experienced international
journalist and historian. The central chapters on the "F-word"
carry the public emergence of the infamous "expletive deleted"
beyond the conventional lexicographer's approach. Lasky's pages on
the use of formerly forbidden language is a triumph of sinuous
semantics. Here, in incisive analysis, is the tortuous struggle of
a once Puritanized literary culture writhing to break free of
censorship and self-censorship. Lasky critically evaluates the
historic effort of the avant-garde of "dirty realism" to find a
path towards what he calls "a usable profanity." In the meantime,
newspaper style books become comic texts, as asterisks take over
from square brackets and millions of readers purse their lips and
indulge in "participatory obscenity." In dealing fully with the
phenomenon of profanity, the new book adds another dimension to
Lasky's thesis on mass culture's trivialization of real social and
political phenomena. It underscores as well oursociety's embrace of
banality, in standardizing politically correct jargon, slang,
patois, pidgin, and various other "grunts and growls." The reader
of the first volume will find here a wholly new range of references
to illuminate the detail of what our newspapers have been
publishing, and how the alert and sophisticated reader can make
sense of the realities they purport to represent.
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