Mr. Orwell, Mr. Schlesinger, and the Language
Fast Shuffling
of a Stacked Deck
Orwell says, without any supporting data or examples, that there's an "increase
in slovenliness and vagueness" in modern prose; in brief, he states
or implies that the language is declining or decadent and needs to be defended.
Schlesinger follows suit, but at least he devotes two sentences to shuffle quickly
from the 1850s to the 1970s, attributing the increase in "linguistic
pollution" to "the rise of mass communications, the growth
of large organizations and novel technologies, the invention of advertising
and public relations, the professionalization of education."
Offhand, I can't produce statistics, word-counts, facts and
figures, and computer printouts of a quantitative analysis of language manipulation
in previous eras. But memory, at least, reminds me, that I've read a lot of
windy, verbose, bombastic rhetoric from ages past. I know that such padding
didn't start in our century. My recollections of Victorian prose (circa 1850)
conjure up sentences dragging on forever, long-winded, inflated, and pompous.
I also recall Shakespeare (circa 1600) playing around in Hamlet, satirizing
the verbal maneuvers and the courtly cant of Polonius, Rosenkrantz and Guildenstern
Chaucer's Pardoner (circa 1400), 1 recall, knew a thing or two about word play,
manipulating his sermons so as to free his audiences from their material goods
to benefit their spiritual enrichment. I've read enough scholastic philosophy
to know that the medievals were not above hair-splitting, nit-picking, padding,
and circumlocution. Contemplating the Roman orators and rhetoricians, then going
back even further, to the rhetors and sophists of the Greeks, I don't believe
I can recall any era in which there wasn't a whole lot of hanky-panky going
on with words.
The notion that people (and their languages) are getting worse is a myth and
an illusion. I think I could accurately predict that there is going:to be more
"misuse" of language in America twenty five years hence, simply because
there will be another 100 million more talking heads here by then. My prediction
may be accurate, but it's not very profound. I remain unimpressed by Orwell's
and Schlesinger's vague carping about how things are getting worse.
Orwell stacks the deck (humorously) by pitting the simple, beautiful style of
Ecclesiastes against a modernized version in pretentious sociological jargon.
Good clean fun, but still deck-stacking. I'll grant that Ecclesiastes is well
written, and Saint Paul too; but I could select some of the "begat"
passages from the Good Book which aren't very inspired writing.
Schlesinger is more sober and serious In his deck-stacking. For example, he
uses the Federalist Papers as an example of how intelligent writers -- and readers
-- were in the good old days of the Founding Fathers: "One can only
marvel at the sophistication of an audience that consumed and relished pieces
so closely reasoned, so thoughtful and analytical." Indeed, the Federalist
Papers were well written, but they were not typical, not representative of the
literally thousands of political tracts in that decade. Junk political pamphlets
and junk sermons were as common in that era as junk mail is in ours. Nor can
the collective minds of their audience be read from an analysis of the Federalist
Papers; it was almost the same audience, after all, which a decade earlier had
made Thomas Paine's emotional diatribe Common Sense the bestselling,
most influential political work in the era.
Virtue Triumphs!
Schlesinger quotes Ralph Waldo Emerson as an authority to make the point that
good people say good things, corrupt people use corrupt language: "The
corruption of man is followed by the corruption of language." Emerson,
too, is a nice guy, lofty and inspiring at times, but pretty flaky as a philosopher,
misty and muddy at times, and his simplistic equation need not be accepted as
gospel truth. In fact, it's this Virtue Triumphs attitude -- that Good People
say Good Things, that Corrupt People use Corrupt Language, that there are Bad
Guys Out There -- it's this attitude that is so dangerous.
This polarized view of human nature, that there are Good People (Our Side!)
and Bad People (Out There), often leads to catastrophe. Persecutions,
crusades, and wars have been carried out in the past as "Good" people,
with the best of intentions, sought to punish or to eradicate the "Bad."
A more realistic attitude toward human nature is that every individual has the
potential and capacity for good and evil and that all people are complicated
mixtures of these qualities. Virtue doesn't always triumph (at least in this
world); some of the most corrupt people can use the language most effectively,
and some of the nicest people can be the most awkward, unskilled users of the
language. Aristotelians, Thomists, and other realistic philosophers have always
insisted on these points, which stress the complexity of the human situation.
It's probable that neither Orwell nor Schlesinger would consciously endorse
a polarized Good Guys/Bad Guys dichotomy; both men were sufficiently exposed
to the ubiquity of human error and evil. But it appears that both men have made
certain unconscious assumptions about human-communication behavior, about
"language manipulation" -- a key term used here in a special way.
Hand-Wringing
Emerson's buddy, Henry David Thoreau, once observed, "There are a thousand
hacking at the branches of evil to one who is hacking at the root." In
my judgment, the root cause of much of our confusion about language today is
the implicit assumption, seldom recognized or articulated, that language manipulation
is intrinsically bad, that only "Bad Guys" manipulate language.
People who unconsciously accept this premise are condemned to hand-wringing,
to feelings of guilt, frustration (due to their call for impossible conditions),
and possibly even misanthropy, because it can be observed that all people, in
all eras, in all lands, have done-and continue to do -- this "bad"
thing of language manipulation.
Many people today intuitively sense their own language manipulation. Because
they do not want to be hypocrltes, any sense of moral outrage they may have
against the language of the political or commercial propagandists, whether the
Kremlin or the Pentagon or Madison Avenue, is countered from within, from their
own sense of personal guilt that they, too, manipulate language. So the call
for reform is usually very personal: "Let's reform ourselves first, then,
once pure, we can go after others."
Indeed, most of the reformers and the critics of political language and commercial
advertising, the texts and the teachers, I've encountered have assumed this
premise that language manipulation is bad. (See my essay, "The Teacher-Heal-Thyself
Myth," in Language and Public Policy in which this is more
fully developed.)
In contrast, let me state the premise that language manipulation is a
neutral, natural human activity and that any "goodness" or "badness"
depends on the context of the whole situation: who is saying what to
whom, under what conditions and circumstances, with what intent, and with what
results. Because such judgments are demanding, complex, and often tentative,
they are much less emotionally satisfying than the "certitude" afforded
by relying upon an a priori judgment that language manipulation is bad
in and of itself.
Such hand-wringing and personal guilt feelings can be recognized in Orwell's
essay. After inveighing against language "abuses," he feels guilty:
"Look back through this essay and for certain you will find that I've
again and again committed the faults I am protesting against." You're
right, George. You do "commit faults." For example, even in your closing
paragraph (after you've already repented), your writing is pretty trite, using
dead metaphors ("One need not swallow such absurdities . . .")
and padding ("one ought to recognize . . . that the present political
chaos ... one can probably bring about some improvements by starting at the
verbal end").
Schlesinger, too, gets into the hand-wringing business. He begins his essay
by linking it to the Orwell essay: "ln 1946 we comfortably supposed
that Orwell was talking about other people -- Nazis and Stalinists, bureaucrats
and sociologists.... Now recent history has obliged us to extend his dispirited
analysis to ourselves."
Much of Schlesinger's essay makes favorable comments about the great political
writings of our Founding Fathers; but, after praising the noble rationality
and lucidity of their writings, Schlesinger admits, "It must not be
posed, however, that even this great generation was immune to temptation."
To win votes, "they changed their tone and relaxed their standards."
Schlesinger quotes some of Jefferson's overblown flattery of farmers and calls
it a "lapse" from realism: "For, as society grew more diversified,
new interests claimed their place in the sun; and each in time had to be courted
and flattered as the Jeffersonians had courted and flattered the- agriculturists.
The desire for success at the polls thus sentimentalized and cheapened the language
of politics."
Flattery is not new, was not born in this country nor with the advent of democracy.
Flattery, often in terms of inflated language, has always been a human way of
courting power. Power, however, in past eras, existed in the Court or the Crown
-- Kings and Queens, Czars and Emperors -- and ample "literature"
exists, written by earlier poets and playwrights praising the virtues of their
royal patrons. Democracy shifted power away from the monarch, giving some power
to the people and to the many diverse groups which now became the new target
audiences for flattery. "Success at the polls" simply replaced
"success at the courts." To suggest that democracy is a cause that
"cheapened the language " ignores the courtly cant of the literary
lackies of previous eras.
Several paragraphs later, Schlesinger modifies or changes his position. After discussing the language manipulation and vulgarity of Nixon as revealed in the White House tapes, Schlesinger wonders about Tocqueville's idea that "such deterioration is inherent in democracy." Now, Schlesinger, speaking of what he calls "linguistic decay," points out its widespread existence today: "But a moment's reflection suggests that the process is by no means confined to the United States nor to democracies. Language degenerates a good deal more rapidly and thoroughly in communist and fascist states.... Nowhere is meaning more ruthlessly manipulated, nowhere is language more stereotyped, mechanical, implacably banal and systematically false. Nowhere is it more purged of personal nuance and human inflection than in Russia and China. In democracies the assault on language is piecemeal, sporadic and unorganized."
Here Schlesinger surveys the contemporary world and finds (correctly)
that " everyone does it." In his next paragraph, he looks back in
American history and notes how "the Constitution is in many respects a
document of calculated omission and masterful ambiguity." Earlier, Schlesinger
had praised the "quest for precision" by the Founding Fathers, and
now he's praising their deliberate ambiguity. Underneath this confusion is a
shifting major premise; but predominantly the assumption is that language manipulation
is bad, per se.
Shoulder-Shrugging
The major weakness of both Orwell's and Schlesinger's essays (as well as of
a score of others by lesser-known writers responding to the language of the
Vietnam war, the Pentagon, and the Watergate affair) is that these scolding
essays end with a vague, shoulder-shrugging attitude. Such essays are sincere
but ineffectual. They may accurately describe the language manipulation or itemize
the jargon, but they offer a weak diagnosis of cause and a weaker prognosis
of "cure."
Orwell and Schlesinger recite a litany of horrors about how language is being
used by politicians and the powerful in such a way that there are terrible human
consequences: war and violence, pain and suffering. But at the end of Orwell's
essay, at the end of the listing of horrors, Orwell feels guilty about his own
"sins," mildly shrugs his shoulders and urges us as individuals to
reform and to disapprove (to mock? to purse our lips? to arch our eyebrows?
to smirk?) of others who abuse language.
Classical rhetoricians recommended that in the closing passages of such a speech
or essay, basically designed to persuade an audience, the writer should call
for specific action. Not a shoulder-shrugging, nor a vague, wishy-washy,
hand-wringing "let's do something" ending. After showing the horrible
examples and moving the audience, the writer should climax the discourse with
specific things to do or at least clarify for the audience that there are specific
things which can be done. I'm not suggesting that the writer oversimplify or
promise a panacea.
Nor am I faulting Orwell or Schlesinger for not "solving" the problem
of political language-manipulation; but I am criticizing those who would so
revere Orwell's essay as to consider it the "classic" statement and
who would recommend it to others as being a "brilliant example" of
what we ought to do. What? What should we do? Orwell doesn't say, except for
the vaguest generalities about reforming oneself. Would you accept this from
a writer or speaker who had just shown you example after example of horrible
auto accidents? Would you be content with mild admonition to "drive carefully"?
A pleasant truism, but hardly a significant statement
If Orwell and Schlesinger had started with the premise that language manipulation
is a natural and normal human activity, then they could have concentrated their
attention on the context (Who Is saying what to whom, with what intent and what
result); on the growing inequality between the professional persuaders and the
average persuadee; on making value judgments about the relative degrees of significance,
merit, importance, of various persuaders and subject matters; and on establishing
priorities for our attention.
If Orwell and Schlesinger had assumed that all people will always try to persuade
others, that money and power tend to concentrate, that there will always be
an inequality in persuasion situations (on one side the powerful persuader,
whether King or Church, government or corporation; on the other side, the individual),
then this cluster of assumptions could have been a reasonable starting point
to suggest how people could move toward a greater degree of equality. In a democratic
society, for example, such movement toward equality for the individual might
be accomplished through both legislation and education.
Thus far, no one has written the Classic-Essay-About-What-To-Do-About-Language-Manipulation-By-Advertisers-And-Politicians.
Nor is it likely that any one person, one essay, or one book will come up with
a "solution." No one has fully itemized or specified those needed
kinds of legislation (such as disclosure laws, open-meeting laws, "shield"
laws covering journalists, standardized systems, Truth-in-Lending, Truth-in-Advertising,
Freedom of Information laws, and so on) that will help balance the situation
between organized persuaders and individual citizens. Nor has anyone organized
coherently a comprehensive educational program (beginning with preschoolers'
TV) that will train masses of people in a sophisticated literacy enabling them
to recognize the persuasion patterns in the many forms of human languages and
to understand the techniques' of the various media.
It's this very absence of any satisfactory plan that ought to be stressed to
students. Probably both Orwell and Schlesinger would agree that their essays
were meant to provoke, not to solve; to awaken, not to lull; to begin and not
to end a quest for a better understanding of language and politics. Orwell's
essay is not the "last word" on the subject. Let us hope it's one
of the first.