Thursday, November 7, 2019
Definition and Examples of Doublespeak
Definition and Examples of Doublespeak Doublespeak isà languageà thats intended to deceive or confuse people. The words used in doublespeak can often be understood in more than one way.à Doublespeak in English Doublespeak may take the form ofà euphemisms, unsupported generalizations, or deliberateà ambiguity. Contrast withà plain English. William Lutz has definedà doublespeakà as language which pretends toà communicateà but doesnt.The wordà doublespeakà is aà neologismà based on theà compoundsà Newspeakà andà Doublethinkà in George Orwells novelà 1984à (1949), though Orwell himself never used the term. Examples and Observations of Doublespeak Political language . . . is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind. (George Orwell, Politics and the English Language, 1946)Employing Orwellian doublespeak, the Texas Department of Agriculture issued a press release that simultaneously touted its efforts to combatà childà obesity while alsoà lifting a decade-old banà on deep fat fryers in public schools. Because nothing slims a childââ¬â¢s waist faster than a helping of French fries. (Mark Bittman, What Weââ¬â¢re Reading Now.à The New York Times, June 25, 2015) William Lutz on Doublespeak Doublespeakà isà languageà which pretends to communicate but doesnt. It isà languageà which makes the bad seem good, the negative seem positive, the unpleasant seem unattractive, or at least tolerable. It isà languageà which avoids, shifts or denies responsibility; language which is at variance with its real or purported meaning. It isà languageà which conceals or prevents thought. Doublespeak is all around us. We are asked to check our packages at the desk for our convenience when its not for our convenience at all but for someone elses convenience. We see advertisements for preowned, experienced or previously distinguished cars, not used cars and for genuine imitation leather, virgin vinyl or real counterfeit diamonds. (William Lutz, Doubts About Doublespeak.à State Government News, July 1993) Withà doublespeak, banks dont have bad loans or bad debts; they have nonperforming assets or nonperforming credits which are rolled over or rescheduled.(William Lutz,à The New Doublespeak. HarperCollins, 1996)War and PeaceI reminded [the soldiers] and their families that the war in Iraq is really about peace.(President George W. Bush, April 2003) A Dehumanizing Language Aà dehumanisingà system requires aà dehumanisingà language. So familiar and pervasive has this language become that it has soaked almost unnoticed into our lives. Those who do have jobs are also described by the function they deliver to capital. These days they are widely known as human resources. The living world is discussed in similar terms. Nature is natural capital. Ecological processes are ecosystem services, because their only purpose is to serve us. Hills, forests and rivers are describedà in government reportsà as green infrastructure.à Wildlife and habitats are asset classesà in an ecosystems market. . . . Those who kill for a living employ similar terms. Israeli military commanders described the massacre of 2,100 Palestinians, most of whom were civilians (including 500 children), in Gaza this summer as mowing the lawn. . . . The army has developed a technique it callsà Shake ââ¬Ën Bake: flush people out with phosphorus, then kill them with high explosives. Shake ââ¬Ën Bake is a product made by Kraft Foods for coating meat with breadcrumbs before cooking it. Terms such as these are designed to replace mental images of death and mutilation with images of something else. (George Monbiot, Cleansing the Stockââ¬â¢ and Other Ways Governments Talk About Human Beings.à The Guardianà [UK], October 21, 2014) Poker-Table Communication During the weeks of negotiations, the usual intercourse of policy deliberation . . . was interrupted. It was replaced by poker-table communication: Instead of saying what they wanted, Europeââ¬â¢s leaders engaged inà doublespeak, saying things publicly to strengthen their negotiating position in Brussels, even if those things were often at odds with their actual intent and thoughts. (Anna Sauerbrey, European Political Poker.à The New York Times, August 9, 2015) Fashionable Doublespeak [Umbro designer David] Blanch has employed an impressive amount ofà doublespeakà to talk up the technological wizardry of his design. The shirts boast intelligent ventilation points, which look very much like arm holes to you and me. It incorporates tailored shoulder darts specifically designed to accommodate the biodynamics of the shoulder. Its hard to tell from the official pictures, but this ever-so-clever touch appears to be a seam. (Helen Pidd, New All-White England Kit.à The Guardian, March 29, 2009) President Harry Trumans Secretary of Semantics I have appointed a Secretary ofà Semanticsa most important post. He is to furnish me with forty to fifty dollar words. Tell me how to say yes and no in the same sentence without a contradiction. He is to tell me the combination of words that will put me against inflation in San Francisco and for it in New York. He is to show me how to keep silentand say everything. You can very well see how he can save me an immense amount of worry. (President Harry S Truman, December 1947. Quoted by Paul Dickson inà Words From the White House. Walker Company, 2013) Resisting Doublespeak What can the averageà receiverà do aboutà doublespeakà and related scams, swindles, and deceptions, and what should the average persuader/advertiser/blogger and so on do to avoid engaging in it? Theà Doublespeak Homepageà recommends asking the following questions about any piece ofà persuasionà being received or planned:à 1. Who is speaking to whom?à 2. Under what conditions?à 3. Under what circumstances?à 4. With what intent?à 5. With what results?If you cannot answerà allà these questions with ease, or if you feel uncomfortable with the answers, or if you cannot determine any answer to them, you are probably dealing with doublespeak. You had better be prepared to delve deeper, or if you are sending the message, youd better think about cleaning it up a bit. (Charles U. Larson,à Persuasion: Reception and Responsibility, 12th ed. Wadsworth, 2010)à à See Examples and Observations below.à Alsoà see: Pronunciation:à DUB-bel SPEK Also Knownà As:à double talk ApoplanesisBureaucrateseA Dictionary of Phony PhrasesGeorge Carlins Essential DrivelGeorge Orwells Rules for WritersGibberishà andà GobbledygookLexical AmbiguityMystificationà andà SkotisonSoft LanguageSoggy Sweats Whiskey SpeechUnder the Flapdoodle Tree: Doublespeak, Soft Language, and GobbledygookVaguenessWhat Are Weasel Words?Why Youll Never Be Told, Youre Fired
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