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Talking Right
The People's Voice ^ | 07/25/06 | Geoff Nunberg

Posted on 07/25/2006 1:08:00 AM PDT by Lorianne

In his new book, Talking Right, linguist Geoff Nunberg examines the parlance of the American political right. Conservatives, Nunberg notes, have been remarkably effective at creating a language through which to convey their agenda. The subtitle of his book illustrates what he's getting at: "How Conservatives Turned Liberalism into a Tax-Raising, Latte-Drinking, Sushi-Eating, Volvo-Driving, New York Times-Reading, Body-Piercing, Hollywood-Loving, Left-Wing Freak Show."

Nunberg, who teaches at the University of California-Berkeley, is a researcher at the Center for the Study of Language and Information at Stanford University. He is also the author of Going Nucular and The Way We Talk Now.

Excerpt: 'Talking Right' by Geoff Nunberg

NPR.org, July 5, 2006 · Introduction

Signs and symbols, language, are the means of communication by which a fraternally shared experience is ushered in and sustained. But conversation has a vital import lacking in the fixed and frozen words of written speech. . . . That and only that gives reality to public opinion. —John Dewey, The Public and Its Problems, 1927

Are the Democrats simply tone deaf? That impression was hard to escape when the party floated a new slogan in the fall of 2005 that was aimed at the 2006 midterm elections: "Together, America can do better." Or more accurately, a newly augmented slogan—in 2004, John Kerry had used "America can do better," without the "together" part. According to the congressional newspaper The Hill, Democrats had chosen the slogan to address the party's "messaging problems" after testing it in focus groups along with a number of alternatives. "We know the majority of people agree with us on the issues," one Democrat was quoted as saying, "but this effort is an acknowledgment that we need to communicate better."

The response to the slogan was, to put it mildly, tepid. The Washington Post reported that Democratic governors were scoffing at it, and the liberal commentators excoriated it. "Pathetic," said Hendrik Hertzberg in the New Yorker. And the Los Angeles Times's Rosa Brooks concurred: "'You can do better' is what you say to a dim child whose grades were even worse than expected. Is this really the Democrats' message to the nation: that we don't need to be quite as pathetic as we now are?" The blogger Wonkette was characteristically caustic: "Now we know where the Democrats stand," she said. "They stand for betterness." And indeed, the slogan seemed to epitomize Democrats' inability to come up with an overarching theme other than "Listen, anybody would be an improvement over this bunch of bozos." (Wonkette mused that the rejected slogans probably included "You Could Do Worse," "It's Not Like There's a Third Party," and "Sorry About That Kerry Thing.")

Given the slogan's resounding vacuity, it might seem like piling on to point out that it's ungrammatical in the bargain, with the together sitting uncomfortably with the singular America. Saying "Together, America can do better" is a bit like saying "Together, the North won the Civil War"— you know what it's supposed to mean, but you have to do a little mental stutter-step to get there. It's clearly a sentence written by a committee: you can tell that one faction wanted to go with "America can do better" while another favored "Together, we can do better" to get the unity theme in there, so they decided to split the difference. Of course, faulty syntax by itself has never been an impediment to successful advertising. But the slogan could stand in, only a little unfairly, for the Democrats' general failure to get their communicative act together, right down to an inability to get their adverbs and subjects to agree.

What makes the party's choice of slogan ironic—or not to mince words, downright depressing—is that the Democrats have been struggling with their "messaging problem" for some time now. I first became involved in those efforts in the spring of 2003, when Senator Byron Dorgan invited three linguists, George Lakoff, Deborah Tannen, and me, to make a panel presentation to the Democratic Senate caucus on "Framing Policy Issues to Enhance Public Understanding," with the aim of helping the Democrats counter the Republicans' success in using language to advance and often obscure their agenda. We talked about "issue framing" and linguistic stereotyping, and the senators seemed receptive and clearly concerned about the problems. And despite that lame slogan, it's clear the Democrats have been trying in their hugger-mugger fashion to respond to Republican rhetoric more assertively.

But as I was reflecting afterward on those discussions, it struck me that the Democrats haven't fully grasped how deep their linguistic problems go, or how they directly reflect the Democrats' inability to tell a coherent story about themselves (I mean over and above observing tautologically that they aren't Republicans). This book shows how that failure has had consequences that go beyond anything that improved framing or better slogans could remedy. The right's most notable linguistic achievement isn't its skill in coining distracting catchphrases, but its success in capturing the language of everyday political discussion.

Talk to most people about "political language" and they're likely to think of the language that politicians and pundits use when they're trying to rouse public support for particular candidates and policies. Most of the books and articles on political rhetoric concentrate on the language of speeches and public pronouncements, rather than the language that ordinary people use when they are talking about political topics—not surprising, since until recently those were the only records of political language available, and scholars naturally congregate where the light is. But while the language of politicians and pundits is ultimately aimed at persuading people to act in certain ways, it can only get there by first persuading them to talk in certain ways. As John Dewey observed, it's only in private conversation that political opinion crystallizes, as people absorb the words they read or hear from on high and incorporate the ideas they stand for into the stories they tell about politics and their lives. Language is a kind of informal plebiscite: when we adopt a new word or alter the usage of an old one, we're casting a voice vote for a particular point of view.

Until a few years ago, you could only observe those shifts in language use in an anecdotal, Andy Rooney sort of way—"Have you noticed how everybody seems to be talking about values these days?" Or what's only slightly better, you could listen to the way a handful of people talked about politics in focus groups, without any real sense of how typical their language was. Now it's possible to date and measure those shifts in language, thanks to the Web, the online discussion groups, and all the databases of press stories and broadcast transcripts. It's true that those tools weren't designed with the aim of gauging public opinion, the way political polls and surveys are. As scientific instruments go, they're highly imperfect: they ignore distinctions of meaning, their counts can be inaccurate, and they're not necessarily representative of the language that people use when they're kicking around political issues with their co-workers or at the breakfast table.

But whatever their limitations, the tools allow us to examine how words are being used by both the press and the general population, and to measure changes in their popularity and shifts in their meaning. Needless to say, these methods have transformed the way we word wonks come at our subject. In the Victorian age, it took a small army of volunteer readers twenty years to amass the 3.5 million citation slips illustrating the usage of all the words in the English vocabulary that were used to prepare the first edition of the Oxford English Dictionary. These days it takes Google just half a second to report that it gets 6.8 million hits for the single phrase liberal media (though you're best off taking the exact figure a bit cautiously).

And it doesn't take much longer than that to track the way class warfare waxes and wanes in the press and the online discussion groups according to the political climate, or to determine whether conservative or liberal writers are more likely to use the word redneck. As a window on public opinion, language can hardly take the place of polls and surveys. Language comes at the world from a different angle, more oblique but in its own way just as telling, if you read it right. The appearance of new phrases like "the liberal mindset" and "hidden agenda"; the shifting meanings of elite, liberal, government, or patriot; or even the fact that conservatives tend to say "you liberals" a lot more than liberals say "you conservatives"—all these things testify to the way political attitudes are embedded in the words that people use to express them.

It's only when you look at those patterns of usage that you discover how deep the Democrats' linguistic problems go. Over recent decades, the left has lost the battle for the language itself. When we talk about politics nowadays—and by "we" I mean progressives and liberals as well as conservatives and people in the center—we can't help using language that embodies the worldview of the right.

The challenge facing liberals and Democrats is to recapture that ordinary language. That's what this book is about.

From Talking Right by Geoffrey Nunberg. All rights reserved. Reprinted with permission from the publisher.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: berkeley; bookreview; language; linquistics; nunberg; talkingright; uc; ucberkley

1 posted on 07/25/2006 1:08:03 AM PDT by Lorianne
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To: Lorianne
They still don't get it. They can't be honest about their program because in political terms, its an election loser. You are socialists and pacifists, want to empower the UN and the Islamofascists and enslave us to the government here at home and want to inundunate the country with the Third World along with letting every felon behind bars out on the street. Have I missed anything? Good, for if Americans knew you are for all that, you wouldn't have a prayer in life. Keep lying about your aims and pray people won't find out who Democrats would really like to be.

(Go Israel, Go! Slap 'Em Down Hezbullies.)

2 posted on 07/25/2006 1:24:40 AM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: Lorianne
"We know the majority of people agree with us on the issues," one Democrat was quoted as saying, "but this effort is an acknowledgment that we need to communicate better."

This is obviously the author's belief as well, and it reflects one of the core weaknesses of the left. A (narrow) majority of the country has been voting Republican/conservative/center-right for over a decade now, but the liberals still refuse to rethink issues. To think that it's all just a problem of messaging is just another way of avoiding any substantive debate.

Sure, I can write poll questions from a liberal perspective that get majority support. But I can also write poll questions on most of the same issues from a conservative perspective that also get majority support. How you frame the issue is terribly important in terms of who wins. But the more important question is the underlying issue, which is probably not reducible to a poll question.

Conservatives by and large are eager to debate these issues. Liberals by and large do their best to hide from them. Just try engaging a liberal in a serious discussion of school choice, consumer choice in health care, or investment based reform of Social Security. They can't sustain the discussion beyond the first scripted talking point. That's a pretty good indication of who has the upper hand on the issues.

3 posted on 07/25/2006 1:28:53 AM PDT by sphinx
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To: Lorianne
How Conservatives Turned Liberalism into a Tax-Raising, Latte-Drinking, Sushi-Eating, Volvo-Driving, New York Times-Reading, Body-Piercing, Hollywood-Loving, Left-Wing Freak Show

Nope. Conservatives didn't do that. We just documented it.

4 posted on 07/25/2006 1:37:19 AM PDT by Smokin' Joe (How often God must weep at humans' folly.)
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To: Lorianne
Add to that their genuine aversion to patriotic sentiment and their reflexive hostility to Christianity and embrace of atheism, they have a lot of ground to cover. Its more than that though; if they reject everything that makes them liberals, then liberalism has no substance to it. Rather its the content of anti-Americanism, militant secularism, anti-capitalism, anti-civilization, anti-traditionalism and anti-national security that makes them who they are. Its not so much a positive message as it is a negative definition: I am not a conservative. So they have to be on the opposite side of what we advocate even if it makes no sense whatever simply to show that for them, the only thing that matters is you're against something. And that feeling is even more important to them than winning their power back.

(Go Israel, Go! Slap 'Em Down Hezbullies.)

5 posted on 07/25/2006 1:37:32 AM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: sphinx
Ask any movie producer reading scripts, or any advertising exec evaluating slogans, if you can't express your good idea in a single declarative sentence, you ain't got one.

The Rats haven't had a good idea in a long time.


6 posted on 07/25/2006 1:44:58 AM PDT by nathanbedford ("I like to legislate. I feel I've done a lot of good." Sen. Robert Byrd)
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To: Smokin' Joe

"How Conservatives Turned Liberalism into a Tax-Raising, Latte-Drinking, Sushi-Eating, Volvo-Driving, New York Times-Reading, Body-Piercing, Hollywood-Loving, Left-Wing Freak Show"


Everyone demonises their foes to some extent, but the author is being disingenous. You could equally argue the point "How Liberals Turned Conservatism into a Xenophobic, Poor-Hating, Racist, Compassionless, NRA-supporting, Bigoted bunch of Christian Fundamentalist, Jingoistic Morons", but of course, he won't do that, will he?


7 posted on 07/25/2006 2:12:40 AM PDT by Vanders9
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To: Lorianne; All
"How Conservatives Turned Liberalism into a Tax-Raising, Latte-Drinking, Sushi-Eating, Volvo-Driving, New York Times-Reading, Body-Piercing, Hollywood-Loving, Left-Wing Freak Show"

It seems to me that the Left did that to themselves. Does the shoe not fit?

If so you gotta wear it. We're merely describing what we are observing.

8 posted on 07/25/2006 2:24:43 AM PDT by backhoe (Just an Old Keyboard Cowboy, Ridin' the Trakball into the Dawn of Information)
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To: Lorianne
The challenge facing liberals and Democrats is to recapture that ordinary language.

Part of this effort is to turn every Republican victory into electoral "theft".

9 posted on 07/25/2006 3:11:16 AM PDT by RedRover
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To: backhoe
Hey, I like sushi!

Please tell me I don't have to hand in my membership card to the Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy. ;-)

10 posted on 07/25/2006 3:13:35 AM PDT by kellynch (Expecto Patronum!)
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To: Lorianne

Somehow...I think their problem goes beyond linguistics....but that's just me.


11 posted on 07/25/2006 3:19:30 AM PDT by mo
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To: kellynch
Please tell me I don't have to hand in my membership card to the Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy. ;-)

I hear rumors that a new decoder ring is being issued... and a new secret handshake.

Seriously, I have a lot of trouble taking these characters, well, seriously. They accuse us on the right of all sorts of things they do themselves- like stereotyping any group they don't like. They mostly write for each other's consumption, and talk only among themselves, creating an echo chamber and hothouse environment that is the antethesis of critical thinking.

They define themselves in negatives, and are then surprised when hardly anyone else is interested in following them.

12 posted on 07/25/2006 3:36:27 AM PDT by backhoe (Just an Old Keyboard Cowboy, Ridin' the Trakball into the Dawn of Information)
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To: mo

They just have better PR than we do. They are also living proof that negative campaigning works.


13 posted on 07/25/2006 3:40:09 AM PDT by kellynch (Expecto Patronum!)
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To: goldstategop
You did miss one thing -

And the Los Angeles Times's Rosa Brooks concurred: "'You can do better' is what you say to a dim child whose grades were even worse than expected. Is this really the Democrats' message to the nation: that we don't need to be quite as pathetic as we now are?"

They believe the United States sucks. It does not and never has. Yet, their constant refrain of how bad this nation supposively is, does not resonate with the majority of the citizens.

14 posted on 07/25/2006 3:41:50 AM PDT by 7thson (I've got a seat at the big conference table! I'm gonna paint my logo on it!)
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To: sphinx

And after the first talking point, the name calling begins.


15 posted on 07/25/2006 3:42:58 AM PDT by 7thson (I've got a seat at the big conference table! I'm gonna paint my logo on it!)
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To: Lorianne

Democrats seem to rely too much on polls and focus groups. Well, a focus group is only as good as the group of losers you lasso into the group. And polls are only good if they are done right, not slanted. New Coke tasted better in focus groups and people preferred it in taste tests, yet when it was introduced, it was a disaster.


16 posted on 07/25/2006 3:47:36 AM PDT by sportutegrl (A person is a person, no matter how small. (Dr. Seuss))
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To: Lorianne
As Orwell in 1984 pointed out, words shape thoughts. If one "controls" the language then one controls the peoples' thinking.
17 posted on 07/25/2006 3:57:48 AM PDT by Junior (Identical fecal matter, alternate diurnal period)
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To: Lorianne
"How Conservatives Turned Liberalism into a Tax-Raising, Latte-Drinking, Sushi-Eating, Volvo-Driving, New York Times-Reading, Body-Piercing, Hollywood-Loving, Left-Wing Freak Show."

Maybe it's because the vast majority of people who participate in those actions, tend to be liberals... After all, if it looks like a duck...

Mark

18 posted on 07/25/2006 4:42:31 AM PDT by MarkL (When Kaylee says "No power in the `verse can stop me," it's cute. When River says it, it's scary!)
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To: Lorianne
This poor schmuck, academic though he might be, is wasting his time rearranging the deck chairs of Democrat speech. He doesn't have a clue that the people DO understand what the Democrats are saying, and DON'T like it.

In his blindness, he is as arrogant at Henry Ford, who famously said, "They can have their cars in any color they want, as long as it's black." That was just before Ford Motor Company permanently lost its lead in car production to General Motors. LOL.

P.S. Interested in a Freeper in Congress? Keep in touch with me.

Congressman Billybob

Latest article: "Stupidity about WW III: 'Here's your Sign' "

Please see a new statement on running for Congress, here.

19 posted on 07/25/2006 4:46:25 AM PDT by Congressman Billybob (Please see new message, here: www.ArmorforCongress.com)
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To: Lorianne

I just read another excerpt from "Talking Right" today and it is so unintentionally funny that I was laughing out loud!


20 posted on 07/29/2006 4:42:07 PM PDT by Chi-townChief
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