VERNACULARS AND THE IDEA OF A STANDARD

A Linn - The Oxford handbook of the history of linguistics, 2013 - books.google.com
The Oxford handbook of the history of linguistics, 2013books.google.com
So wrote Otto Jespersen (1946: 39), and the idea of a standard language has undoubtedly
been one of the most seductive in the history of European linguistic thought. It has resulted
in some of the most heated of debates on language matters, drawing in both academic and
non-academic actors, and ranging from the learned Questione della Lingua in Italy around
the turn of the sixteenth century (see below; also Engler 1993, Vitale 1960) to nineteenth-
century debates on how best to standardise a newly independent Norwegian (Haugen …
So wrote Otto Jespersen (1946: 39), and the idea of a standard language has undoubtedly been one of the most seductive in the history of European linguistic thought. It has resulted in some of the most heated of debates on language matters, drawing in both academic and non-academic actors, and ranging from the learned Questione della Lingua in Italy around the turn of the sixteenth century (see below; also Engler 1993, Vitale 1960) to nineteenth-century debates on how best to standardise a newly independent Norwegian (Haugen 1966, Linn 1997), to the ongoing and often passionate discussions in homes and in bars throughout the modern world about ‘right’and ‘wrong’usage. The notion of a standard language has underpinned language teaching and learning since the Middle Ages, based as language teaching is on the acceptance that there is a right form of a language and a wrong form. The belief in a standard has motivated much of the grammar and dictionary writing, and has also been a central ideology in the emergence and reinforcement of the modern European nations. In the period following the Renaissance, national pride was expressed through the notion that the European vernaculars were as rich and as ordered as the Classical languages. Under the influence of Romanticism this idea of the richness of the ‘national common languages’ was increasingly linked to a sense of there being some sort of natural relationship between a people and their language, and indeed the perceived link
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