The Story of Ain't : America, Its Language, and the Most Controversial Dictionary Ever Published - David Skinner

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The Story of Ain't

America, Its Language, and the Most Controversial Dictionary Ever Published

By: David Skinner

eBook | 28 January 2014

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"It takes true brilliance to lift the arid tellings of lexicographic fussing into the readable realm of the thriller and the bodice-ripper....David Skinner has done precisely this, taking a fine story and honing it to popular perfection."

**—Simon Winchester,**New York Times bestselling author of The Professor and the Madman

The captivating, delightful, and surprising story of Merriam Webster's Third Edition, the dictionary that provoked America's greatest language controversy. In those days, Webster's Second was the great gray eminence of American dictionaries, with 600,000 entries and numerous competitors but no rivals. It served as the all-knowing guide to the world of grammar and information, a kind of one-stop reference work.

In 1961, Webster's Third came along and ignited an unprecedented controversy in America's newspapers, universities, and living rooms. The new dictionary's editor, Philip Gove, had overhauled Merriam's long held authoritarian principles to create a reference work that had "no traffic with...artificial notions of correctness or authority. It must be descriptive not prescriptive." Correct use was determined by how the language was actually spoken, and not by "notions of correctness" set by the learned few. Dwight MacDonald, a formidable American critic and writer, emerged as Webster's Third's chief nemesis when in the pages of the New Yorker he likened the new dictionary to the end of civilization..

The Story of Ain't describes a great cultural shift in America, when the voice of the masses resounded in the highest halls of culture, when the division between highbrow and lowbrow was inalterably blurred, when the humanities and its figureheads were shunted aside by advances in scientific thinking. All the while, Skinner treats the reader to the chippy banter of the controversy's key players. A dictionary will never again seem as important as it did in 1961.

Industry Reviews
"An immensely entertaining history...Skinner manages to transform this somewhat arcane lexicographical dispute into a real page turner...Skinner ably and amusingly captures the hysterical tone of the bitter public quarrel while suggesting that it foreshadowed many of the arguments over values and standards that we're still fighting about today."
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