Vulgar Tongues: An Alternative History of English Slang
(Adobe EPUB eBook, Kindle Book, OverDrive Read)
Slang is the language of pop culture, low culture, street culture, underground movements and secret societies; depending on your point of view, it is a badge of honor, a sign of identity or a dangerous assault on the values of polite society. Of all the vocabularies available to us, slang is the most alive, constantly evolving and—as it leaks into the mainstream and is taken up by all of us—infusing the language with a healthy dose of vitality.
Witty, energetic and informative Vulgar Tongues traces the many routes of slang, beginning with the thieves and prostitutes of Elizabethan London and ending with the present day, where the centuries-old terms rap and hip-hop still survive, though their meanings have changed. On the way we will meet Dr. Johnson, World War II flying aces, pickpockets, schoolchildren, hardboiled private eyes, carnival geeks and the many eccentric characters who have tried to record slang throughout its checkered past.
If you're curious about flapdragons and ale passion, the changing meanings of punk and geek, or how fly originated on the streets of eighteenth-century London and square in Masonic lodges, this is the book for you.
If you are having problem transferring a title to your device, please fill out this support form or visit the library so we can help you to use our eBooks and eAudio Books.
Max Décharné. (2017). Vulgar Tongues: An Alternative History of English Slang. Pegasus Books.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation (style guide)Max Décharné. 2017. Vulgar Tongues: An Alternative History of English Slang. Pegasus Books.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities Citation (style guide)Max Décharné, Vulgar Tongues: An Alternative History of English Slang. Pegasus Books, 2017.
MLA Citation (style guide)Max Décharné. Vulgar Tongues: An Alternative History of English Slang. Pegasus Books, 2017.
Library | Owned | Available |
---|---|---|
Shared Digital Collection | 1 | 1 |
There is 1 hold on this title.
OverDrive Product Record
- images
- cover:
- href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-100/0439-1/{10C2940A-07CF-496E-9876-9180C168F147}Img100.jpg
- type: image/jpeg
- thumbnail:
- href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-200/0439-1/{10C2940A-07CF-496E-9876-9180C168F147}Img200.jpg
- type: image/jpeg
- cover150Wide:
- href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-150/0439-1/10C/294/0A/{10C2940A-07CF-496E-9876-9180C168F147}Img150.jpg
- type: image/jpeg
- cover300Wide:
- href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-400/0439-1/10C/294/0A/{10C2940A-07CF-496E-9876-9180C168F147}Img400.jpg
- type: image/jpeg
- cover:
- formats
- identifiers:
- type: ISBN
- value: 9781681775005
- name: Adobe EPUB eBook
- id: ebook-epub-adobe
- identifiers:
- identifiers:
- type: ASIN
- value: B01N0ES3H2
- name: Kindle Book
- id: ebook-kindle
- identifiers:
- identifiers:
- type: ISBN
- value: 9781681775005
- name: OverDrive Read
- id: ebook-overdrive
- identifiers:
- mediaType
- eBook
- primaryCreator
- role: Author
- name: Max Décharné
- title
- Vulgar Tongues
- dateAdded
- 2017-07-06T18:35:23.51-04:00
- contentDetails
- href: https://link.overdrive.com/?websiteID=141&titleID=3043835
- type: text/html
- account:
- name: Sacramento Public Library (CA)
- id: 1151
- sortTitle
- Vulgar Tongues An Alternative History of English Slang
- crossRefId
- 3043835
- subtitle
- An Alternative History of English Slang
- id
- 10c2940a-07cf-496e-9876-9180c168f147
- starRating
- 3.3
OverDrive MetaData
- isPublicDomain
- False
- formats
- fileName: VulgarTongues_9781681775005_3043835
- partCount: 0
- fileSize: 2930165
- identifiers:
- type: ISBN
- value: 9781681775005
- rights:
- type: Copying
- value: 0
- type: Printing
- value: 0
- type: Lending
- value: 0
- type: ReadAloud
- value: 0
- type: ExpirationRights
- value: 0
- name: Adobe EPUB eBook
- isReadAlong: False
- id: ebook-epub-adobe
- onSaleDate: 6/6/2017
- samples:
- source: From the book
- formatType: ebook-overdrive
- url: https://samples.overdrive.com/?crid=10c2940a-07cf-496e-9876-9180c168f147&.epub-sample.overdrive.com
- fileName: VulgarTongues_3043835
- partCount: 0
- fileSize: 0
- identifiers:
- type: ASIN
- value: B01N0ES3H2
- name: Kindle Book
- isReadAlong: False
- id: ebook-kindle
- onSaleDate: 6/6/2017
- samples:
- source: From the book
- formatType: ebook-overdrive
- url: https://samples.overdrive.com/?crid=10c2940a-07cf-496e-9876-9180c168f147&.epub-sample.overdrive.com
- fileName: VulgarTongues_9781681775005_3043835
- partCount: 0
- fileSize: 2930158
- identifiers:
- type: ISBN
- value: 9781681775005
- name: OverDrive Read
- isReadAlong: False
- id: ebook-overdrive
- onSaleDate: 6/6/2017
- samples:
- source: From the book
- formatType: ebook-overdrive
- url: https://samples.overdrive.com/?crid=10c2940a-07cf-496e-9876-9180c168f147&.epub-sample.overdrive.com
- creators
- role: Author
- fileAs: Décharné, Max
- bioText: Max Décharné was born in England. He was a member of the band Gallon Drunk, and has been with his band The Flaming Stars since 1995. He lives in London and Berlin.
- name: Max Décharné
- publishDate
- 2017-06-06T00:00:00-04:00
- isOwnedByCollections
- True
- title
- Vulgar Tongues
- fullDescription
- This rollercoaster ride through the colorful history of slang—from highwaymen to hip-hop—is a fresh and exciting take on the subject: entertaining and authoritative without being patronizing, out-of-touch or voyeuristic.
Slang is the language of pop culture, low culture, street culture, underground movements and secret societies; depending on your point of view, it is a badge of honor, a sign of identity or a dangerous assault on the values of polite society. Of all the vocabularies available to us, slang is the most alive, constantly evolving and—as it leaks into the mainstream and is taken up by all of us—infusing the language with a healthy dose of vitality.
Witty, energetic and informative Vulgar Tongues traces the many routes of slang, beginning with the thieves and prostitutes of Elizabethan London and ending with the present day, where the centuries-old terms rap and hip-hop still survive, though their meanings have changed. On the way we will meet Dr. Johnson, World War II flying aces, pickpockets, schoolchildren, hardboiled private eyes, carnival geeks and the many eccentric characters who have tried to record slang throughout its checkered past.
If you're curious about flapdragons and ale passion, the changing meanings of punk and geek, or how fly originated on the streets of eighteenth-century London and square in Masonic lodges, this is the book for you. - reviews
- premium: False
- source: Publishers Weekly
- content: Lovers of language will be engrossed by Décharné's excavation of the history of English-language slang. A well-stocked and exhaustively researched compendium.
- premium: False
- source: Wall Street Journal
- content: Whether discussing Geoffrey Chaucer or Johnny Depp's tattoos, Mr. De´charne´ proves, as he might put it, hip to the tip. He has stretched his lunch-hooks into some unlikely places in his quest for curious argot, and there's a whole lot of bizarre information in his fusebox (or his idea pot, if you prefer).
- premium: False
- source: Library Journal (starred)
- content: A breathtaking history and overview of English slang. Along with collections focused on linguistics and the history of the English language, this well-written volume will be of interest to general readers and others curious about popular culture. Highly recommended.
- premium: False
- source: The New York Times Book Review
- content: Décharné's mind is a trivia trap of the first order, and the book is a bracing historical tour of the lexicons of sex, prostitution, crime, alcohol, drugs, popular music and military slang. The most significant achievement of this book is to show how closely related some of our offensive, obscene and informal language really is.
- premium: False
- source: Kirkus Reviews
- content: An erudite miscellany that tracks centuries of playful mutations endured by the English language. Bawdy and jive.
- premium: False
- source: The Times (UK)
- content: The chapters range over sex, crime, booze, drugs, war, politics, the armed forces, schools, everywhere that private languages develop and thrive. There are many good stories, and his chapters on music slang are the best.
- premium: False
- source: Counterpunch
- content: A fascinating study. Décharné makes it absolutely clear that [slang] moves in waves through time from commonly expressed, to underground or forbidden, to aboveground again.
- premium: False
- source: Lynn Truss;New Statesman
- content: A spectacular feat, collating information from a mind-boggling range of sources—from jazz lyrics to dime novels, from 18th-century brothel directories to 1960s criminal autobiographies.
- premium: False
- source: Washington Post
- content: A triumph of philological research and mordant social commentary.
- premium: True
- source:
- content:
February 27, 2017
Lovers of language will be engrossed by Décharné’s (Hardboiled Hollywood) excavation of the history of English-language slang. Based on his work, humans should be grateful for slang, or we wouldn’t have been able to discuss sex over the ages (without being persecuted). We’d have no limericks, certainly, and this book would be much shorter. (Aside for trivia fiends: if your English friends say they’re “discussing Uganda,” they’re almost assuredly not.) Décharné notes that the first English-language gay slang dictionary was published in the late 20th century, but he traces English slang terms for homosexuality as far back as the 18th century. Slang was, not surprisingly, ubiquitous in the criminal underworld, and there’s a vast array of terms for drunkenness and drug-taking. One wrinkle in the book: since the author is English, U.S. readers may stumble over a few obscure references. But there are also interesting peeks into Cockney rhyming slang, a “much quoted, and much misunderstood” form. Slang used to “come from the street,” but Décharné laments that it is now fighting against the “fake language” concocted by the PR industry, diluting slang’s gritty charm. If his dark predictions are true, this well-stocked and exhaustively researched compendium has arrived just in time to preserve the flavor of undiluted slang. Agent: George Lucas, InkWell Management.
- premium: True
- source:
- content:
April 1, 2017
From 17th-century cant to modern-day music slang, an erudite miscellany that tracks centuries of playful mutations endured by the English language.Chapters divide the book thematically with each covering one morsel of the slang lexicon, such as the Shakespearean "Beast with Two Backs" and its other naughty euphemisms. Decharne (Capital Crimes: Seven Centuries of London Life and Murder, 2012, etc.) boasts an impressive library of sources, such as Francis Grose's Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue (1785), and devotes the majority of his efforts to pinpointing the first printed occurrences of various words. These publications are valuable but inherently problematic, as a word's popular usage may not always line up with its first printed date. As the author writes, "the trouble with slang, and language generally, is that it doesn't stay still; meanings shift and mutate with the passing of time or the coming of new associations, and yesterday's plain speech can become today's double entendre." From Grose to Samuel Johnson, Decharne arranges a rich array of Georgian and Victorian vulgarity. Regarding the modern era, the author cedes a large portion of the book to popular music and its associated lingo, from the Beatles to N.W.A. These are some of the most inspired moments of the book, but they outweigh the historical sections and suggest that most slang as it is currently known began in a recording studio. While it's interesting to learn about the origins of band names like the Pogues and the Buzzcocks, one can't help but feel Decharne's career as a music writer seeping through as he inadvertently shows how thin the line is between etymological history and pop-culture trivia. The author sticks to his role as archivist and rarely gives his own thoughts on why people are drawn to slang: sociological analysis is often glossed over in an effort to delight with more strange words for R-rated things. His exhaustive research is at times exhausting and frequently reduced to mere lists of words and their definitions. Bawdy and jive, well-researched but underanalyzed.COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
- premium: True
- source:
- content:
Starred review from April 15, 2017
Songwriter, musician, and author Décharné gives a breathtaking history and overview of English slang as an ever-evolving language of "pop culture, street culture and secret society." Chapters cover everything from crime, prisons, drugs, sex, and alcohol, to war and politics. A close look at the history of "groovy" takes us from its status as an exclusive "in" 1940s jazz term to the mainstream, as Simon & Garfunkel are "feeling groovy" on their 1966 record album. From Middle English and Shakespeare to the Beat Generation and the age of technology, Décharné's insightful history explores how slang sometimes morphs from a private, hidden language to popular culture embraced by the masses. Accompanied by an extensive bibliography and detailed index, this volume is a useful addition to Michael Adams's recent In Praise of Profanity. VERDICT Along with collections focused on linguistics and the history of the English language, this well-written volume will be of interest to general readers and others curious about popular culture. Highly recommended.--Herbert E. Shapiro, Lifelong Learning Soc., Florida Atlantic Univ., Boca Raton
Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
- popularity
- 98
- links
- self:
- href: https://api.overdrive.com/v1/collections/v1L1BWwAAAA2I/products/10c2940a-07cf-496e-9876-9180c168f147/metadata
- type: application/vnd.overdrive.api+json
- self:
- id
- 10c2940a-07cf-496e-9876-9180c168f147
- starRating
- 4.5
- images
- cover:
- href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-100/0439-1/{10C2940A-07CF-496E-9876-9180C168F147}Img100.jpg
- type: image/jpeg
- thumbnail:
- href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-200/0439-1/{10C2940A-07CF-496E-9876-9180C168F147}Img200.jpg
- type: image/jpeg
- cover150Wide:
- href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-150/0439-1/10C/294/0A/{10C2940A-07CF-496E-9876-9180C168F147}Img150.jpg
- type: image/jpeg
- cover300Wide:
- href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-400/0439-1/10C/294/0A/{10C2940A-07CF-496E-9876-9180C168F147}Img400.jpg
- type: image/jpeg
- cover:
- isPublicPerformanceAllowed
- False
- languages
- code: en
- name: English
- subjects
- value: History
- value: Language Arts
- value: Nonfiction
- publishDateText
- 06/06/2017
- otherFormatIdentifiers
- type: ISBN
- value: 9781681777900
- mediaType
- eBook
- shortDescription
- This rollercoaster ride through the colorful history of slang—from highwaymen to hip-hop—is a fresh and exciting take on the subject: entertaining and authoritative without being patronizing, out-of-touch or voyeuristic.
Slang is the language of pop culture, low culture, street culture, underground movements and secret societies; depending on your point of view, it is a badge of honor, a sign of identity or a dangerous assault on the values of polite society. Of all the vocabularies available to us, slang is the most alive, constantly evolving and—as it leaks into the mainstream and is taken up by all of us—infusing the language with a healthy dose of vitality.
Witty, energetic and informative Vulgar Tongues traces the many routes of slang, beginning with the thieves and prostitutes of Elizabethan London and ending with the present day, where the centuries-old terms rap and hip-hop still survive, though their meanings have changed.... - sortTitle
- Vulgar Tongues An Alternative History of English Slang
- crossRefId
- 3043835
- subtitle
- An Alternative History of English Slang
- publisher
- Pegasus Books
- bisacCodes
- code: HIS054000
- description: History / Social History
- code: LAN000000
- description: Language Arts & Disciplines / General
- code: LAN009010
- description: Language Arts & Disciplines / Linguistics / Historical & Comparative