Words

I like words. I like the way they can be tethered together to produce a satisfying sentence.

Jessica likes words even more than I do (that’s why her website is called “wordridden”). She studied linguistics and she’s a translator by trade—German into English. Have a read of her post about translating Victor Klemperer to get an inkling of how much thought and care she puts into it.

Given the depth of enquiry required for a good translation, I was particularly pleased to read this remark by John Le Carré:

No wonder then that the most conscientious editors of my novels are not those for whom English is their first language, but the foreign translators who bring their relentless eye to the tautological phrase or factual inaccuracy – of which there are far too many. My German translator is particularly infuriating.

That’s from an article called Why we should learn German, but it’s really about why we should strive for clarity in our use of language:

Clear language — lucid, rational language — to a man at war with both truth and reason, is an existential threat. Clear language to such a man is a direct assault on his obfuscations, contradictions and lies. To him, it is the voice of the enemy. To him, it is fake news. Because he knows, if only intuitively, what we know to our cost: that without clear language, there is no standard of truth.

It reminds me of one of my favourite Orwell essays, Politics and the English Language:

Political language — and with variations this is true of all political parties, from Conservatives to Anarchists — is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.

But however much I agree with Le Carré’s reprise of Orwell’s call for clarity, I was brought up short by this:

Every time I hear a British politician utter the fatal words, “Let me be very clear”, these days I reach for my revolver.

Le Carré’s text was part of a speech given in Berlin, where everyone would get the reference to the infamous Nazi quote—Wenn ich Kultur höre … entsichere ich meinen Browning—and I’m sure it was meant with a sly wink. But words matter.

Words are powerful. Words can be love and comfort — and words can be weapons.

Have you published a response to this? :

Responses

4 Likes

# Liked by Claudio (aglioeolio) on Monday, July 10th, 2017 at 3:11am

# Liked by Charles Stanhope on Monday, July 10th, 2017 at 12:37pm

# Liked by Gabor Lenard on Monday, July 10th, 2017 at 3:45pm

# Liked by lape on Tuesday, August 8th, 2017 at 7:41am

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Previously on this day

10 years ago I wrote Chloe

.

17 years ago I wrote Grab your place at dConstruct

Tickets are about to go on sale.

20 years ago I wrote Home again, home again

I’m back from the west of Ireland. I was sorry to leave. I had a wonderful, music-filled time.

21 years ago I wrote I, for one, welcome our new CSS overlords

Everyone’s been talking about the new design over at Adaptive Path. It sure is a beauty; a crisp, clean, elegant design wrapped up in yummy XHTML and CSS.

21 years ago I wrote What decade is your personality living in?

My personality is, apparently, living in the 1990s:

21 years ago I wrote Mirror, mirror

I’ve got a new picture, taken on my trip to Dublin, up at The Mirror Project.