
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
This year's Reith Lecturer is Jean Aitchison, a Professor of Language and Communication in the Faculty of English Language and Literature at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of Worcester College, Oxford.
In her first lecture, Professor Aitchison asks: Is our language sick? She explores what troubles us most about the way in which our language is changing, who is responsible, and what rules are being discarded. She considers why many of these rules were artificially constructed in the first place and argues that we need to understand language, not try to control it. Informal speech is not intrinsically worse than formal speech, she says, but different, and that the ever-shifting nature of language, is what keeps it flexible.
4.3
143143 ratings
This year's Reith Lecturer is Jean Aitchison, a Professor of Language and Communication in the Faculty of English Language and Literature at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of Worcester College, Oxford.
In her first lecture, Professor Aitchison asks: Is our language sick? She explores what troubles us most about the way in which our language is changing, who is responsible, and what rules are being discarded. She considers why many of these rules were artificially constructed in the first place and argues that we need to understand language, not try to control it. Informal speech is not intrinsically worse than formal speech, she says, but different, and that the ever-shifting nature of language, is what keeps it flexible.
5,390 Listeners
368 Listeners
1,832 Listeners
158 Listeners
7,678 Listeners
305 Listeners
506 Listeners
1,812 Listeners
1,076 Listeners
2,128 Listeners
896 Listeners
959 Listeners
1,940 Listeners
1,051 Listeners
236 Listeners
56 Listeners
832 Listeners
76 Listeners
741 Listeners
2,979 Listeners
3,079 Listeners
976 Listeners
112 Listeners
45 Listeners