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The magical kind of spell and the written kind of spell are historically linked. This reflects how saying a word can change the state of the world, both in terms of fictional magic spells that set things on fire or make them invisible, and in terms of the real-world linguistic concept of performative utterances, which let us agree to contracts, place bets, establish names, and otherwise alter the fabric of our relationships.

In this episode, your hosts Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne get enthusiastic about word magic! We talk about how the word magic systems are set up differently in three recent fantasy books we like: Babel by R.F. Kuang, Carry On by Rainbow Rowell, and the Scholomance series by Naomi Novik. We also talk about linguistic performatives: why saying “I do” in a movie doesn’t make you married, aka Felicity Conditions, aka an excellent drag name; performativity as applied to gender (yup, Judith Butler got it from linguistics); the “hereby” test; and how technology changes what counts as a performative.

Read the transcript here.

Announcements: 
People often ask us to recommend interesting books about linguistics that don't assume prior knowledge of linguistics, so we've come up with a list of 12 books that we personally recommend, including both nonfiction and fiction books with linguistically interesting elements! Get this list of our top 12 linguistics books by signing up for our free email list. Email subscribers get an email once a month when there's a new episode of Lingthusiasm, and this month existing subscribers will see a link to our linguistics books list! If you find this any time in the future, you'll get the books list in the confirmation email after you sign up.

In this month’s bonus episode, we get excited about the results of the 2022 Lingthusiasm Survey. We talk about synesthesia fomo, whether people respond differently to kiki/bouba depending on whether they're aware of them as a meme, complicating the "where is a frown?" map, the plural of emoji, and more! Plus, we mentioned swearing in this episode? Yeah, we’ve got bonus episodes about that too.   

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Click here for links to things mentioned in this episode.

Files

80: Word Magic by Lingthusiasm

The magical kind of spell and the written kind of spell are historically linked. This reflects how saying a word can change the state of the world, both in terms of fictional magic spells that set things on fire or make them invisible, and in terms of the real-world linguistic concept of performative utterances, which let us agree to contracts, place bets, establish names, and otherwise alter the fabric of our relationships.

Comments

Anonymous

I don't know if this was intentional, but the "Get this list of our top 12 linguistics books by signing up for our free email list." link goes to tumblr with a substack url is buried in the tumblr link. The substack direct url appears to be https://lingthusiasm.substack.com/

Anonymous

Ahh yes, thanks for catching that, you are correct and it's been updated!

Anonymous (edited)

Comment edits

2023-06-13 06:00:56 The "Carry On" books make me think of the Phonogram graphic novels by Kieron Gillen & Jamie McKelvie -- the basic idea being that music is magic, literally! Definitely going to check out some of the books mentioned in this episode.
2023-05-21 00:11:01 The "Carry On" books make me think of the Phonogram graphic novels by Kieron Gillen & Jamie McKelvie -- the basic idea being that music is magic, literally! Definitely going to check out some of the books mentioned in this episode.

The "Carry On" books make me think of the Phonogram graphic novels by Kieron Gillen & Jamie McKelvie -- the basic idea being that music is magic, literally! Definitely going to check out some of the books mentioned in this episode.