The City in Slang: New York Life and Popular Speech

Author:   Allen
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780195092653


Pages:   320
Publication Date:   20 April 1995
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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The City in Slang: New York Life and Popular Speech


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Full Product Details

Author:   Allen
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 13.60cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 20.30cm
Weight:   0.417kg
ISBN:  

9780195092653


ISBN 10:   0195092651
Pages:   320
Publication Date:   20 April 1995
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

A lively piece of popular scholarship. --The New Yorker Mr. Allen has written a 'book on words about the city' that makes a provocative cultural history. Like Whitman, who is the patron saint of the volume and whose words open each chapter, 'Mr. Allen is 'through Manhattan's streets...walking, these things gathering. --New York Times An unusual and interesting cultural history of urban life....A readable study of interest to urban and cultural historians and linguists as well as a general audience. --Publishers Weekly Charmingly written. --Contemporary Sociology


A professor goes slumming through the dives and byways of Gotham, a la Henry Higgins, to hear what people have to say and to tell us what it means. Allen (Sociology/University of Connecticut, Storrs) approaches his subject from a historical rather than a linguistic point of view. Most historical slang, he maintains, can be associated with urbanization...and more directly with urbanism - the distinctive culture that emerges from this social form. The prodigious growth of N.Y.C. during the second half of the 19th century, Allen explains, created a city of immense complexity and harshness, one whose impersonality could only be broken down through the development of distinct social categories and an argot that succinctly described the new patterns of daily life. Colloquial speech thus became a kind of specialized code that sorted every fresh experience into a set of recognizable categories. Allen organizes these expressions according to subject ( The Bright Lights ; Mean Streets ; The Sporting Life, etc.) and provides etymologies and background information for each. He succeeds nicely, for the most part, in shading in the picture of the city that these expressions sketch, but his etymologies are frequently wide of the mark and poorly documented, and his knowledge of present-day New York seems quite limited. Fortunately for the reader, however, the scholarship is inconspicuous enough not to detract from the history, which is anecdotal and very rich. A good read that puts on airs: Allen should have dropped the philology and stuck to his chronicle of the urban scene. (Kirkus Reviews)


Author Information

Irving Lewis Allen is Professor of Sociology at the University of Connecticut, Storrs.

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Latest Reading Guide

NOV RG 20252

 

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