Mary Talbot, Karen Atkinson & David Atkinson,
Language and power in the modern world. Edinburgh: Edinburgh
University Press, 2003. Pp. ix, 342. Pb £16.99.
Centered on critical language study, Language and power in the
modern world aims to “reveal and challenge aspects of the
intense socialization to which we are all subjected, not only through
language but also about language” (p. 4). The authors begin with a
relatively brief introduction to the concept of power, leaning heavily on
Foucault as interpreted by, especially, Norman Fairclough. The
introduction, while focused on power, delves into Critical Discourse
Analysis and the critical (socio)linguistics literatures to situate a
quick overview of the book, which is organized around five chapters:
“Language and the media,” “Language and
organisations,” “Language and gender,” “Language
and youth,” and “Multilingualism, ethnicity and
identity.” In each chapter, the authors present an initial review
essay of 11 to 20 pages, followed by an “activities” section,
which typically presents two or three suggested tasks for students. The
bulk of each chapter, however, is the set of four or five (edited)
readings of primary sources relevant to the chapter's topic. The
readings, regularly addressed in the earlier chapters as “Reading
1.2” or “Reading 2.3,” often with no title or author
noted, are the best part of this book. The reading selections are quite
recent, with only one title published before 1995, allowing the reader to
catch up on some outstanding primary research that takes the five topic
areas well beyond the classic studies of the 1970s and 1980s. The
authors' choice of readings is well considered and fulfills their
goal not to “promote one approach over another, [but]
rather to illustrate a variety of approaches to the study of language and
power” (4).