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Title: Mother Tongue: How Humans Create Language by Joel Davis ISBN: 1-55972-206-1 Publisher: Carol Publishing Corporation Pub. Date: 01 March, 1994 Format: Hardcover Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $21.95 |
Average Customer Rating: 4 (3 reviews)
Rating: 5
Summary: An excellent overview of language
Comment: Joel Davis' "Mother Tongue" is an excellent overview of language development in people and in cultures. I would recommend this book to anyone with a casual interest in linguistics, in spite of rumoured "historical errors". (As a matter of fact I gave it to my son as a source for his homeschooling work.)
Davis is an excellent writer who's friendly, informative approach makes the complexity of his topic fascinating rather than the more usual dense tangle of language most science writers bring to their topics.
I finished this 333 page book in less than a week and couldn't put it down!
Rating: 2
Summary: Historical inaccuracies abound
Comment: A particularly glaring error fabricates a civil
war between Mary I and Elizabeth I after the
death of Edward VI. There was no such civil
war. The successions of Mary I and Elizabeth I
were peaceful with the exception of the uprising
in favor of Lady Jane Grey, which was put down by
Mary, and though carried out by Protestants
completely disowned by Elizabeth, as a basic
survival measure.
Rating: 5
Summary: Historical inaccuracies abound.
Comment: There are so many egregious historical errors that
they undermine one's confidence in the linguistic
material.
Examples:
It is stated that after an initial defeat at
Stamford Bridge, William of Normandy defeated the
Anglo-Saxon King Harold II at Hastings. Now,
Stamford Bridge was a victory for Harold II
indeed, but not a defeat for William who was not
even involved. There were multiple individual
invasions and Harold II's opponent was King
Harold III (Hardrada) of Norway who was allied
with Earl Tostig, Harald's own traitorous brother.
Nor was Harald II the son of Edward the Confessor
as is stated. Edward had no issue, which is one
reason it was open season on the English crown.
Harold II is known to history as Harald
Godwinsen, being the son of the Earl Godwin.
Other more minor errors: There is a reference to
Charles V of Spain, which confuses 2 of the many
titles of this monarch, who as Holy Roman Emperor
was Charles V, but as King of Spain Charles I.
Also, the Spanish Academy could not have been
founded in 1713 by Philip IV, since that monarch
was long dead. One presumes the Bourbon Philip
V was meant.
One hopes the reporting of the linguistic
material is more careful than the historical.
If not ...
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