Every Word Is a Bird We Teach to Sing
Encounters with the Mysteries and Meanings of Language
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
July 10, 2017
“Words have been knots of beauty and mystery as long as I can remember,” writes the author of this insightful collection of 15 essays that explore language and its underappreciated nuances. The title, taken from the final line of the essay “You Are What You Say,” extols how we “animate words with our imagination” in order to communicate with one another. Tammet (Thinking in Numbers) has high-functioning autism and he relates how, when young, he thought not in words but numbers, each one assigned a different meaning—89, for instance, meant “snow.” Although his condition initially made him socially withdrawn, it taught him an appreciation of the different ways in which we confer meaning on words and vocabulary. His essays include personal accounts of his experiences teaching English to Lithuanian students and interacting with psychologists studying speech patterns, a history of the would-be universal language Esperanto, and appreciations of the works of Australian poet Les Murray (himself autistic) and of writers working in the indigenous Nahuatl language of Mexico and Kikuyu language of Kenya. Tammet is generous in his acceptance of many different forms and styles of communication. His essays will be eye-openers for anyone who takes the meaning of words on the printed page for granted. Agent: Andrew Lownie, Andrew Lownie Literary Agency.
August 1, 2017
Writer and linguist Tammet (Thinking in Numbers; Embracing the Wide Sky) takes us on a series of thought-provoking journeys as he probes the depth and intricacies of how language profoundly affects behavior at every social and political level. Through these memoirlike essays, Tammet demonstrates his eclectic approach to an exploration of the richness of language and its profound effect on his own life and those about whom he writes. From his childhood characterized by "high-function" autism, in which he saw language as numeric, to his encounters with and critique of Esperanto, this whirlwind narrative mirrors the author's polyglot talents. The chapter on the Icelandic language is especially compelling as Tammet demonstrates how it became an essential political tool as nationalists sought their independence from Denmark. In spite of the nationalist goal of Icelandic linguistic purity, the grammar has become "malleable" and "words transform the world around us." VERDICTThose interested in language, words, meaning, and sociolinguistics will find this slim volume to be a transforming read. General readers will also find this highly readable work engaging.--Herbert E. Shapiro, Lifelong Learning Soc., Florida Atlantic Univ., Boca Raton
Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
August 1, 2017
The author of Thinking in Numbers: On Life, Love, Meaning, and Math (2013, etc.) shows us that language is a far more ornately feathered fowl than casual consideration can conceive. Tammet begins with probably the most engaging and revealing section of his entire text: an account of how he, born with "high-functioning autism," learned language, a process involving numbers, colors, poems, and a most fecund imagination. He also shows us--more or less indirectly--the fatuousness of teaching methods that assume and presume that everyone learns in the same way (think: our current obsession with standardized testing). Tammet's directly autobiographical accounts slip into the background as he encourages us to follow him on a kind of intellectual circumnavigation of Planet Language. These chapters cover such subjects as the status of Esperanto, people who write in disappearing languages, political attempts to prevent the language from altering too much, sign language, translation, and conversations with computers. A particularly moving segment involves the study of telephone language--the grammar, the protocols, the unexpected intimacies--a study that led, in one case, to a staged reading of When Cancer Calls, a performance of transcripts of cancer-related calls among family members. The author sometimes tells us more than we may want to know: the section on Esperanto, are overlong, and some of his fascinations with the details of translation will delight, well, translators. It seems he is often determined to tell us the histories of things at the expense of our patience. But there are many moments of delightful and surprising luminescence. In his section about the telephone, he notes how ordinary words and deep emotion are "the freight of every family's telephone line." "Words, words, words," said Hamlet--that brilliant, verbose Dane would find in these pages a most welcome elaboration.
COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Starred review from September 1, 2017
Diagnosed with high-functioning autistic savant syndrome when he was 25, Tammet (Thinking in Numbers, 2013) first made sense of the world in numerical terms. His relatively late discovery of words set him on a path to thinking about language in unconventional ways. The essays in this book record some of his personal encounters along linguistic byways including teaching English in Lithuania, translating into French the work of award-winning (and autistic) Australian poet Les Murray, and delving into the history of Esperanto. He meets one of the last remaining speakers of the Nahuatl language in Mexico, the first and only Englishman to be a member of the French Academy, and missionaries working on translating the Bible into Amanab. Other essays consider the work of Iceland's Person's Names Committee ( charged with preserving the nation's ancient infant-naming traditions ), the richness of American Sign Language, the debate over whether African literature should be written in African languages, and the movement to revive the Manx language on the Isle of Man. A fascinating journey through language and some of its many varied forms and uses.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)
دیدگاه کاربران