ジョン・マクウォーター「携帯メールが言葉を乱す・・・なんちゃって~」 | TEDのすゝめ ( TED 英語 スーパープレゼンテーション 洋楽 映画 スポーツ )

TEDのすゝめ ( TED 英語 スーパープレゼンテーション 洋楽 映画 スポーツ )

英語の勉強をしているみなさんに、おすすめのTEDトークを紹介します。
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あちこちへ脱線しますがご容赦ください~(^o^)v

John McWhorter: Txtng is killing language. JK!!!
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John McWhorter: Txtng is killing language. JK!!!

小さいことは気にすんなッ、主題と主張をつかもう!
若者の携帯メールは文章ではなくて、指先でする「会話」であり、全く別の言語だ、というTEDトークです。若者じゃなくても携帯メールは使いますが、相手の顔が見えず、声も聞こえない「会話」なので、受け取り方次第で微妙なニュアンスの違いや誤解が生じることもありますよね。絵文字や顔文字を使ったり、試行錯誤しながら使わなければなりませんね。

【話題】 携帯メールと話し言葉
【時間】 13分48秒
【要約】
1.携帯メールは言葉の乱れの元凶か?
 携帯メールが若者の言葉を乱しているという話をよく耳にするが、それは間違った認識だ。何が起こっているのかを知るために、視野を広くもって、「言語」とは何かを考えてみてほしい。

2.「話し言葉」と「書き言葉」との違い
 言葉のはじまりは「話す」ことであり、現在でも話すことが言葉の基本である。これに対し、文章を書くことは、人類の歴史の中ではごく最近の出来事である。文章を書くときは、過去を振り返りながらよく考えて書くことができる。しかし、文章と同じ文言で話すヒトは誰もいない。ざっくばらんな会話は少ない単語で、もっとユルい感じだ。

3.話すように書く
 昔の演説のように、書き言葉のように話す場合もある。その逆に、話すように書くこともありだ。それが携帯メールなのだ。これは、ポケットの中にある小さな機械にメッセージを受け取ることができるという新しい技術ができて初めて可能になったのだ。

4.言葉の「乱れ」ではなく「複雑化」
 例えば、
 ① lol :共感や理解を表わす実用的な言葉
 ② slash :話題を変えるときのマーク

5.携帯メールは「新しい言語」
 いつの時代も、誰かが、言葉の乱れを憂慮している。今に始まったわけではない。携帯メールで若者が使う言葉は、乱れではなく、まったく別のものだ。若者は、普通に書くことも同時に学んでいて、バイリンガルや方言を使い分けるのと同じように両方ともできるのだ。現代の若者たちはすごいスピードで、すごく複雑な、全く別の言語のレパートリーを増やしているのだ。

6.最後に
 これからも言葉は変化し続けるだろう。もし2013年(20年後)の世界に行くことができるとしたら、16歳の少女がどんなメールを書いているか知りたい(笑)

【語彙】

txting :texting、携帯メール

JK :just kidding、冗談冗談

scourge :災難のもと、破壊の元凶

literacy :読み書きの能力

miraculous :奇跡的な、驚くべき、素晴らしい

emergent :創発的な、新生の

complexity :複雑さ

artifice :技術

linguist :言語学者

telegraphic :電報みたいに簡潔な?

reflective :意味が深い

bleed :出血

lend oneself to :~に役立つ

brute :厳しい

bagginess :たるみ、ゆるみ

substrate :基板

subtle :微妙な

lol :laugh out loud、爆笑

btw :by the way、ところで

hiccup :しゃっくり

guffaw :バカ笑い

empathy :共感

accommodation :調和、和解

pragmatic particles :実用的な不変化詞

mundane :平凡な

gracefully :奥ゆかしく

wistfully :物憂げに

Downton Abbey :イギリスのテレビドラマ

articulate :明確に述べる

bidialectal :方言を使い分ける人

repertoire :レパートリー

sequel :続編

a sheaf of :~の一束


【transcripts】

We always hear that texting is a scourge. The idea is that texting spells the decline and fall of any kind of serious literacy, or at least writing ability, among young people in the United States and now the whole world today. The fact of the matter is that it just isn't true, and it's easy to think that it is true, but in order to see it in another way, in order to see that actually texting is a miraculous thing, not just energetic, but a miraculous thing, a kind of emergent complexity that we're seeing happening right now, we have to pull the camera back for a bit and look at what language really is, in which case, one thing that we see is that texting is not writing at all. What do I mean by that?


Basically, if we think about language, language has existed for perhaps 150,000 years, at least 80,000 years, and what it arose as is speech. People talked. That's what we're probably genetically specified for. That's how we use language most. Writing is something that came along much later, and as we saw in the last talk, there's a little bit of controversy as to exactly when that happened, but according to traditional estimates, if humanity had existed for 24 hours, then writing only came along at about 11:07 p.m. That's how much of a latterly thing writing is. So first there's speech, and then writing comes along as a kind of artifice.


Now don't get me wrong, writing has certain advantages. When you write, because it's a conscious process, because you can look backwards, you can do things with language that are much less likely if you're just talking. For example, imagine a passage from Edward Gibbon's "The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire:"


"The whole engagement lasted above twelve hours, till the graduate retreat of the Persians was changed into a disorderly flight, of which the shameful example was given by the principal leaders and the Surenas himself."


That's beautiful, but let's face it, nobody talks that way. Or at least, they shouldn't if they're interested in reproducing. That -- (Laughter) is not the way any human being speaks casually.


Casual speech is something quite different. Linguists have actually shown that when we're speaking casually in an unmonitored way, we tend to speak in word packets of maybe seven to 10 words. You'll notice this if you ever have occasion to record yourself or a group of people talking. That's what speech is like. Speech is much looser. It's much more telegraphic. It's much less reflective -- very different from writing. So we naturally tend to think, because we see language written so often, that that's what language is, but actually what language is, is speech. They are two things.


Now of course, as history has gone by, it's been natural for there to be a certain amount of bleed between speech and writing. So, for example, in a distant era now, it was common when one gave a speech to basically talk like writing. So I mean the kind of speech that you see someone giving in an old movie where they clear their throat, and they go, "Ahem, ladies and gentlemen," and then they speak in a certain way which has nothing to do with casual speech. It's formal. It uses long sentences like this Gibbon one. It's basically talking like you write, and so, for example, we're thinking so much these days about Lincoln because of the movie. The Gettysburg Address was not the main meal of that event. For two hours before that, Edward Everett spoke on a topic that, frankly, cannot engage us today and barely did then. The point of it was to listen to him speaking like writing. Ordinary people stood and listened to that for two hours. It was perfectly natural. That's what people did then, speaking like writing.


Well, if you can speak like writing, then logically it follows that you might want to also sometimes write like you speak. The problem was just that in the material, mechanical sense, that was harder back in the day for the simple reason that materials don't lend themselves to it. It's almost impossible to do that with your hand except in shorthand, and then communication is limited. On a manual typewriter it was very difficult, and even when we had electric typewriters, or then computer keyboards, the fact is that even if you can type easily enough to keep up with the pace of speech, more or less, you have to have somebody who can receive your message quickly.


Once you have things in your pocket that can receive that message, then you have the conditions that allow that we can write like we speak. And that's where texting comes in. And so, texting is very loose in its structure. No one thinks about capital letters or punctuation when one texts, but then again, do you think about those things when you talk? No, and so therefore why would you when you were texting?


What texting is, despite the fact that it involves the brute mechanics of something that we call writing, is fingered speech. That's what texting is. Now we can write the way we talk. And it's a very interesting thing, but nevertheless easy to think that still it represents some sort of decline. We see this general bagginess of the structure, the lack of concern with rules and the way that we're used to learning on the blackboard, and so we think that something has gone wrong. It's a very natural sense.


But the fact of the matter is that what is going on is a kind of emergent complexity. That's what we're seeing in this fingered speech. And in order to understand it, what we want to see is the way, in this new kind of language, there is new structure coming up.


And so, for example, there is in texting a convention, which is LOL. Now LOL, we generally think of as meaning "laughing out loud." And of course, theoretically, it does, and if you look at older texts, then people used it to actually indicate laughing out loud. But if you text now, or if you are someone who is aware of the substrate of texting the way it's become, you'll notice that LOL does not mean laughing out loud anymore. It's evolved into something that is much subtler.


This is an actual text that was done by a non-male person of about 20 years old not too long ago.


"I love the font you're using, btw."


Julie: "lol thanks gmail is being slow right now"


Now if you think about it, that's not funny. No one's laughing. (Laughter) And yet, there it is, so you assume there's been some kind of hiccup.


Then Susan says "lol, I know," again more guffawing than we're used to when you're talking about these inconveniences.


So Julie says, "I just sent you an email."


Susan: "lol, I see it."


Very funny people, if that's what LOL means.


This Julie says, "So what's up?"


Susan: "lol, I have to write a 10 page paper."


She's not amused. Let's think about it. LOL is being used in a very particular way. It's a marker of empathy. It's a marker of accommodation. We linguists call things like that pragmatic particles. Any spoken language that's used by real people has them. If you happen to speak Japanese, think about that little word "ne" that you use at the end of a lot of sentences. If you listen to the way black youth today speak, think about the use of the word "yo." Whole dissertations could be written about it, and probably are being written about it. A pragmatic particle, that's what LOL has gradually become. It's a way of using the language between actual people.


Another example is "slash." Now, we can use slash in the way that we're used to, along the lines of, "We're going to have a party-slash-networking session." That's kind of like what we're at. Slash is used in a very different way in texting among young people today. It's used to change the scene.


So for example, this Sally person says, "So I need to find people to chill with" and Jake says, "Haha" -- you could write a dissertation about "Haha" too, but we don't have time for that — "Haha so you're going by yourself? Why?"


Sally: "For this summer program at NYU."


Jake: "Haha. Slash I'm watching this video with suns players trying to shoot with one eye."


The slash is interesting. I don't really even know what Jake is talking about after that, but you notice that he's changing the topic. Now that seems kind of mundane, but think about how in real life, if we're having a conversation and we want to change the topic, there are ways of doing it gracefully. You don't just zip right into it. You'll pat your thighs and look wistfully off into the distance, or you'll say something like, "Hmm, makes you think --" when it really didn't, but what you're really -- (Laughter) — what you're really trying to do is change the topic. You can't do that while you're texting, and so ways are developing of doing it within this medium. All spoken languages have what a linguist calls a new information marker -- or two, or three. Texting has developed one from this slash.


So we have a whole battery of new constructions that are developing, and yet it's easy to think, well, something is still wrong. There's a lack of structure of some sort. It's not as sophisticated as the language of The Wall Street Journal. Well, the fact of the matter is, look at this person in 1956, and this is when texting doesn't exist, "I Love Lucy" is still on the air.


"Many do not know the alphabet or multiplication table, cannot write grammatically -- "


We've heard that sort of thing before, not just in 1956. 1917, Connecticut schoolteacher. 1917. This is the time when we all assume that everything somehow in terms of writing was perfect because the people on "Downton Abbey" are articulate, or something like that.


So, "From every college in the country goes up the cry, 'Our freshmen can't spell, can't punctuate.'"


And so on. You can go even further back than this. It's the President of Harvard. It's 1871. There's no electricity. People have three names.


"Bad spelling, incorrectness as well as inelegance of expression in writing."


And he's talking about people who are otherwise well prepared for college studies.


You can go even further back. 1841, some long-lost superintendent of schools is upset because of what he has for a long time "noted with regret the almost entire neglect of the original" blah blah blah blah blah.


Or you can go all the way back to 63 A.D. -- (Laughter) -- and there's this poor man who doesn't like the way people are speaking Latin. As it happens, he was writing about what had become French. And so, there are always — (Laughter) (Applause) — there are always people worrying about these things and the planet somehow seems to keep spinning.


And so, the way I'm thinking of texting these days is that what we're seeing is a whole new way of writing that young people are developing, which they're using alongside their ordinary writing skills, and that means that they're able to do two things. Increasing evidence is that being bilingual is cognitively beneficial. That's also true of being bidialectal. That's certainly true of being bidialectal in terms of your writing. And so texting actually is evidence of a balancing act that young people are using today, not consciously, of course, but it's an expansion of their linguistic repertoire. It's very simple. If somebody from 1973 looked at what was on a dormitory message board in 1993, the slang would have changed a little bit since the era of "Love Story," but they would understand what was on that message board. Take that person from 1993 -- not that long ago, this is "Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure" -- those people. Take those people and they read a very typical text written by a 20-year-old today. Often they would have no idea what half of it meant because a whole new language has developed among our young people doing something as mundane as what it looks like to us when they're batting around on their little devices.


So in closing, if I could go into the future, if I could go into 2033, the first thing I would ask is whether David Simon had done a sequel to "The Wire." I would want to know. And — I really would ask that — and then I'd want to know actually what was going on on "Downton Abbey." That'd be the second thing. And then the third thing would be, please show me a sheaf of texts written by 16-year-old girls, because I would want to know where this language had developed since our times, and ideally I would then send them back to you and me now so we could examine this linguistic miracle happening right under our noses. Thank you very much.