Death Sentences: How Clichés, Weasel Words, and Management-speak are Strangling Public LanguageA brilliant and scathing polemic about the sorry state of the English language and what we can--and must--do about it. Do you ever leave work wondering whether all of the words exchanged between you and your colleagues in emails and meetings actually had any meaning? You spend the day "touching base" and "networking, workshopping" and "impacting, strategizing" and "implementing, going forward with your key performance indicators." No wonder you are exhausted when you leave the office! Even as English spreads around the globe, the language itself is shrinking. Our vocabularies are increasingly trimmed of subtlety and obscure words are forbidden unless they qualify as economic or business jargon. The constant pressure in our society to be efficient and productive is working like a noose around the neck of the English language. Don Watson is one of Australia's foremost writers and intellectuals. In "Death Sentences," he takes up the fight against the pestilence of bullet points, the scourge of buzzwords, and the dearth of verbs in public discourse. He encourages us to wage war against the personal mission statement and the Powerpoint essay and to take back our language from the corporate wordsmiths and marketeers. BACKCOVER: Praise for Don Watson's "Death Sentences" |