An Admirable Point
A Brief History of the Exclamation Mark!
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- 6,49 €
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- 6,49 €
Descripción editorial
The International Bestseller - Featured on BBC Radio 4
Love it or hate it, the exclamation mark has been with us from Beowulf to the spam email - an enthusiastic history for language lovers!
Few punctuation marks elicit quite as much love or hate as the exclamation mark. It's bubbly and exuberant, an emotional amplifier whose flamboyantly dramatic gesture lets the reader know: here be feelings! Scott Fitzgerald famously stated exclamation marks are like laughing at your own joke; Terry Pratchett had a character say that multiple !!! are a 'sure sign of a diseased mind'. So what's the deal with ! ?
An Admirable Point recuperates the exclamation mark from its much maligned place at the bottom of the punctuation hierarchy. It explores how ! came about in the first place some six hundred years ago, and uncovers the many ways in which ! has left its mark on art, literature, (pop) culture, and just about any sphere of human activity - from Beowulf to spam emails, ee cummings to neuroscience.
Whether you think it's over-used, or enthusiastically sprinkle your writing with it, ! is inescapable.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This entertaining debut by Standing on Points podcaster Hazrat "reclaim the exclamation mark from its much maligned and misunderstood place at the bottom of the punctuation hierarchy." She chronicles historical uses of exclamation points and the development of punctuation generally in the Western world, noting that the need for punctuation to distinguish "exclamatory or admirative sentences" was first proposed by Italian scholar Iacopo Alpoleio da Urbisaglia in the mid-14th century, and the modern exclamation point was first used by Florentine lawyer Coluccio Salutati in 1399. Hazrat argues that the vagueness of the exclamation point—which might indicate fear, anger, surprise, or joy—makes the "grammar police" want to systematize it, describing how Henry and Francis Fowler's 1906 style guide summed up the modern era's austere attitude toward punctuation in positing that if punctuation alters the meaning of a sentence, its use is "radically bad." The illuminating history traces how the rules of written language change over time, and the sharp analysis is grounded in a convincing philosophy of language, as when the author asserts that grammar should change as colloquial usage does because grammar's purpose is to enable readers to "feel our way" into a text. This is worth shouting about. Photos.