Full Text
30. Class, Ethnicity, and the Formation of “Standard English”
Tony Crowley
Subject
History, Literature
Key-Topics
class, ethnicity, language
DOI: 10.1111/b.9781405129923.2008.00043.x
Extract
The emergence of the English vernacular as a culturally valorized and legitimate form took place in the Renaissance period. It is possible to trace in the comments of three major writers of the time the origins of a persistent set of problems which later became attached to the term “standard English.” Following the introduction of Thomas Wilson's phrase “the king's English” in 1553, the principal statement of the idea of a centralized form of the language in the Renaissance was George Puttenham's determination in 1589 of the “natural, pure and most usual” type of English to be used by poets: “that usual speech of the court, and that of London and the shires lying about London, within lx miles and not much above” (Puttenham 1936: 144–5). In the following decade the poet and colonial servant Edmund Spenser composed A View of the State of Ireland(1596) during the height of the decisive Nine Years War between the English colonists in Ireland and the natives. In the course of his wide-ranging analysis of the difficulties facing English rule, Spenser offers a diagnosis of one of the most serious causes of English “degeneration” (a term often used in Tudor debates on Ireland to refer to the Gaelicization of the colonists): “first, I have to finde fault with the abuse of language, that is, for the speaking of Irish among the English, which, as it is unnaturall that any people should love ... log in or subscribe to read full text
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