Choose a genre
Bestsellers
Hardback
  1. Breaking Dawn Stephenie Meyer
  2. By Any Means Charley Boorman
  3. Salvation in Death J D Robb
  4. Things Ain't What They Used to Be Philip Glenister
  5. The Miracle at Speedy Motors Alexander McCall Smith
Paperback
  1. Under a Blood Red Sky Kate Furnivall
  2. New Moon Stephenie Meyer
  3. Twilight Stephenie Meyer
  4. Eclipse Stephenie Meyer
  5. Twilight (film tie-in) Stephenie Meyer
Audio
  1. Lorraine Kelly: Between You and Me Lorraine Kelly Read by the author
  2. The Comfort of Saturdays Alexander McCall Smith Read by Hilary Neville
  3. Testimony Anita Shreve Read by Adam Sims and Jennifer Woodward
  4. Millennium Tom Holland Reader Andrew Sachs
  5. The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency Alexander McCall Smith Read by Adjoa Andoh

Unspeak: The Language of Everyday Deception

Steven Poole

Unspeak: The Language of Everyday Deception

View Enlarged Image

ISBN:
9780316731003
ISBN-10:
0-316-73100-5

Little, Brown

A Little, Brown title

Unspeak is language as a weapon. Every day, we are bombarded with those apparently simple words or phrases that actually conceal darker meanings. ‘Climate change’ is less threatening than ‘global warming’; we say 'ethnic cleansing' when we mean mass murder. As we absorb and repeat Unspeak we are accepting the messages that politicians, businessmen and military agencies wish us to believe. Operation Iraqi Freedom did more than put a positive spin on the American war with Iraq; it gave the invasion such a likeable name that the American news networks quickly adopted it as their tagline for reporting on the war. By repackaging the language we use to describe international affairs or domestic politics, Unspeak tries to make controversial issues unspeakable and, therefore, unquestionable.

In this thought-provoking and important book, Steven Poole traces the globalizing wave of modern Unspeak from culture wars to the culture of war and reveals how everyday words are changing the way we think.

Reviews

  • ‘Poole’s admirable object is something like moral alertness, founded on close reading. UNSPEAK is in the best sense a stimulus and a provocation. Unmasking unspeak is addictive, and anyone can play’ TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT
  • 'Poole’s archaeology of everyday terms is impressive and salutary' OBSERVER
  • 'The book’s central purpose is to remind us to unpack the terms in which public debate is framed' INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY

Hardback: £9.99

Published 16/02/2006

Add to basket

  • Book of the Week

    Blighty

    Blighty

    Steve Lowe and Alan McArthur