Archive for Uncategorized

Peter Tobin

Killing accused ‘murdered before’

(from http://news.bbc.co.uk/ 23 June, 2009.)

Peter Tobin, 62, from Renfrewshire, in Scotland,

Dinah McNicol, of Tillingham, Essex

he had lived in Irvine Drive in Margate, Kent

he abducted Miss Hamilton in Bathgate, near Edinburgh

Miss McNicol had disappeared after attending a music festival at Liphook, Hampshire

What exactly is the status of ‘Renfrewshire’ in the above citations? Is it a town like the other first-placed area names? Well, the suffix ‘shire’ eliminates that option. We know from the lexical meaning of ‘shire’ that it must be a region identifier beyond the scope of a town/ city. However precise the writer was in locating the other town/ city names, Tobin’s home town/ city name is missing. Tobin has, unfortunately, been in the news before, and we know that he is from Johnstone. A quick check by the journalist would have uncovered that information. One assumption might be that both ‘Johnstone’ and ‘Renfrewshire’ are too unknown to English readers that the author chose to rephrase the location in more Anglo-centric friendly terms.

And what about ‘Scotland’? It comes second, mirroring the use of ‘Essex’, ‘Kent’, ‘Edinburgh’ and ‘Hampshire’. Is ‘Scotland’ a region on the same par as, say, ‘Essex’? Clearly it cannot be level with ‘Edinburgh’, and the reader is left totally confused as to the writer’s system of location categorisation.

The presentation of place names should be a simple matter. First comes the town name then the region. If Britain is supposed to be a single county, then following this simple algorithm should not be so difficult. The major difficulty will be in selecting a version of ‘region’.

Deciding on definition of ‘region’ is not that easy to pin down. Should a writer use the UK government’s criterion of nine areas for English regions, the local authority, councils, county, burgh, or any other idiosyncratic categorisation? There are nine regions in England according to the UK Government, but the number of English boroughs and councils is far higher. Scotland has thirty-two unitary authorities, and until 1996, had nine major regions, whose names are still used colloquially today.

The Telegraph maintains uniformity in town name – region nomenclature choosing the Scottish authority region, even if the implication that Scottish authorities are a part of Britain runs entirely contrary to their erstwhile usage of ‘England-as-Britain’. (See Viagra not getting it up in Scotland.)

Tobin, of Johnstone, Renfrewshire, denies murdering Miss McNicol.

Ultimately though, portraying Scotland on a par with, say, the West Midlands or Essex and naming of Scotland as a region of Britain is both Anglo-centric and inaccurate. It is also deeply insulting.

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BBC gets it right

Accurate representation in Dental care changes report due

(from http://news.bbc.co.uk/ 21 June, 2009.)

My interest is piqued whenever seeing a reference to an ‘England’ only article. Time and time again, the mantra of ‘England as Britain’ rears its ugly head. This time, though, the Beeb were bang on in their reporting of a British Dental Association (BDA) review.

The review only covered England. There were no references to Britain in the article, and the extent of the coverage was clarified;

In Scotland and Northern Ireland, not covered by the changes, the number of complex treatments rose.

The contract also covers Wales, although the review only deals with services in England.

Why the BDA studied England only may be a matter of Anglo-centricism or of practicality. Leaving that issue aside, let’s hold this Beeb article up as an example of professional, accurate reporting.

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A man’s a man for a’ that

Devolution is on us. Full independence seems possible. Scotland is approaching an epoch in which we must choose our future path. However, that choice is complicated by a great many factors. This blog is dedicated to charting the media’s representation of issues related to a single aspect of that choice: our image as it is represented linguistically in the media.

Clearly evident is that our self-image remains malleable, shaped by the torrent of media use and abuse. This image affects how we view ourselves in relation to the Union. Are we British? Scottish? British and Scottish? A kind of English? Are the nations of Great Britain varieties of a greater whole? A common lexical meaning agreement does not exist between users of these terms. Geopolitical uses merge with historical uses have interplay with notions of identity and separation.

The question of further devolution, strengthened union with England (why never a mention of N. Ireland or Wales?), or complete independence (from N. Ireland/ Wales?) is framed by reference to terms that are nebulous, unshared by the population, each sticking to their own Venn-segment category of belief. As our feeling for the Union changes depending on how we see ourselves, an interest of mine is charting how we are represented in the media.

Daily I encounter uses of nation-referent terms that fail to disclose their authors’ underlying belief about the scopes of the terms. Often, I suspect, the uses are subliminal, common-denominator uses prompted by political correctness. At other times, the uses are slips that indicate narrower beliefs. Many more times, though, come around simply through ignorance: ignorance of the issues and meanings inherent.

I’ll try to remain unbiased in my reporting. The truth will allow a clearer, more defined and more sustainable discourse as the questions relating to our future path continues. But I expect that I’ll fail to some extent. I’ll pick on those uses by British-identified writers that ignore the Scottish view. I’ll criticise those Scots who maintain the Hoochter Teuchter semi-barbarian image. I’ll worry about foreign (often US-centric) idiolects that equate Britain with England whenever there’s a missed Scottish perspective, while promoting that use whenever Scotland’s presence is unnecessary. These are my prejudices, and I’ll try to be careful of them.

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