Once the language of thieves and beggars, slang is an ever present part of today's culture for people across the strata. It allows us to connect to others, to express otherwise guarded thoughts, and to convey humor in the everyday. But how did slang escape its stigma as the language of the streets and integrate itself so seamlessly with standard English?
The Vulgar Tonguetells the full story of English language slang, from its origins in early British beggar books to its spread in American and Australian culture in the eighteenth century. The aim is not to record the history of the over 125,000 English words that make up the lexis. Rather, the author focuses on the common, often profane themes that run through the word-list--crime, sex, bodily parts and functions, insults, and drink and drugs--and their scope and function throughout the various cultures and overlapping subcultures of English language history, from the sporting world to the university campus to ethnic communities. In tracing its development and trajectory throughout the English-speaking world, Jonathon Green offers an impassioned defence for its vitality, showing how slang has grown into a modern, versatile vocabulary that has nevertheless established its own role in contemporary English.
Drawing on thirty years' worth of research,The Vulgar Tongueis a celebration of the words and phrases of an overlooked aspect of human language and interaction.
Preface 1. Introduction: Slang: A User's Manual 2. In the Beginning: The Prehistory 3. Lewd, Lousey Language: Beggars and Their Books 4. Crime and Punishment 5. Play's the Thing 6. The Sound of the City 7. Flash: This Sporting Life 8. Down Under 9. Sex in the City 10. Cockney Sparrers 11. America: Pioneers 12. Keeping Score: Nineteenth-century Slang Lexicography 13. Gayspeak 14. American Century 15. African-American Slang: The Flesh Made Word 16. Campus and Counter-Cultulă'