
The BBC's Advisory Committee on Spoken English was set up to provide an authoritative guide to pronunciation and the use of language for BBC announcers. The results of its deliberations were published for general consumption in a series of pamphlets called Broadcast English. Based on primary sources, the compelling story of the Advisory Board during its crucial first 13 years is told here for the first time. It reveals how board members, including George Bernard Shaw and A. Lloyd James, soon discovered that standardization and regulation of spoken language is extremely challenging and highly controversial. The first two chapters describe the linguistic aspects of its work, particularly after it had taken on the role of standardizing spoken English, a task well beyond its mandate and the BBC Charter. The third and fourth chapters look at the challenges the Committee encountered in assuming their prescriptive role, the structural crisis which ensued, and the changes to linguistic policies which then followed. Chapter 5 and 6 document the final years of the Committee, explore the reasons for its failure in its role as guardian of 'properly' spoken English, and consider the legacy of the Committee in today's broadcasting. The book will appeal to linguists and historians generally, especially those interested in the English language and language policy.
This book investigates the historical attempt by the BBC Advisory Committee on Spoken English to standardize pronunciation and language usage during its initial thirteen years of operation. Author Jürg R. Schwyter utilizes primary source documentation to analyze the committee's internal conflicts, the influence of prominent members like George Bernard Shaw, and the eventual failure of their prescriptive mandate. The work argues that the regulation of spoken language within a broadcasting framework is inherently fraught with controversy and structural instability.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and historians of the English language recognize this work as a definitive account of the BBC's early efforts to codify spoken standards. Readers frequently note the academic rigor and the clarity with which the author navigates the complex intersection of institutional policy and linguistic evolution.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191056405
ISBN-13:
9780191056406
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