In The New York Times, Alessandro Tersigni suggests that we rely on dictionaries and not digital assitants when we think about our words. In so doing, he invokes George Orwell’s “Politics and the English Language.” From “Don’t Throw Your Dictionary Away”:
Writers consulting a dictionary make a choice — writers guided by an app like Grammarly have their choices made for them.I’ll borrow a line from Ted Berrigan’s poem “Mi Casa, Su Casa”: “‘I want human to begin with’” — and also thereafter.
Where Grammarly says, “Stay on-brand with consistent communication,” Orwell warns that “the great enemy of clear language is insincerity.” Grammarly urges users to “generate text with A.I. prompts,” while Orwell cautions that “ready-made phrases” inevitably “construct your sentences for you — even think your thoughts for you.” Grammarly brags that its users can “rewrite full sentences with a click,” while Orwell notes that “the worst thing one can do with words is to surrender to them.”
It’s a fight between robotic consistency and human creativity.
Related reading
All OCA dictionary posts : Orwell posts (Pinboard)
comments: 7
I almost sent you a link—just in case—but I figured you’d see this piece. I’m going to use three Orwell essays in composition this term and copied the same paragraph. Might have to steal the Berrigan line, too!
It’s yours!
Today I e-mailed to remind the BBC that in his essay Orwell warned us to visualize the words and metaphors we wrote. The chaps had written about the dam in Ethiopia, saying that Sudan and Egypt were "—upstream—." But the dam is in the highlands. I'm confident that a lot of people, not just me, wrote in.
I hope you get a reply. I wrote to them a while ago with a question about a sentence in an online article — nuttin’.
I am always too modest to ask for a reply. I see the word was changed to downstream, and I think they added a few words to explain that water was a worry.
I forget what things I've written about before; once was because they misused disinterested to mean uninterested, but always when I checked the copy later they had made the change.
I don’t ask, but I think a reply is a courtesy.
I just checked, and the sentence I wondered about (it was missing necessary commas in an article about missing punctuation) remains unchanged.
As the kids say: Gross!
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