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Chasing the Sun: Dictionary-Makers and the Dictionaries They Made (1996)

por Jonathon Green

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In this book Jonathon Green traces the history of the dictionary from the first lexicon created in 2340 B.C. to the pinnacle of the Oxford English Dictionary and today's computer-generated successors of that great masterwork.
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My journal note for this one only mentions that I found it a bit verbose at times. Overall, not the greatest book on the topic. A pity because it sounded so interesting when I picked it up. ( )
  bloodravenlib | Aug 17, 2020 |
Given that dictionaries are one of my favorite things EVER, I actually squealed in glee when I came across this book. I was fascinated by the beginnings, and the book pretty much held my interest nearly to the end. My enthusiasm waned a little at the very close of the book, but that was merely because the author was putting forth his opinions on the inclusion of slang/pejorative terms in modern dictionaries. While a very real and worthy debate, I already agree with him, so the last part was more of me impatiently saying "yes, yes, you're totally right, now where's something I don't already know?" ( )
  ratastrophe | Mar 28, 2015 |
I loved The Professor and the Madman by Simon Winchester, so I was very excited about this more general history of dictionaries. Unfortunately, I found it so dry that I could not make it past the second chapter. ( )
  craigim | Nov 29, 2009 |
Jonathon Green's 1996 book Chasing the Sun: Dictionary Makers and the Dictionaries They Made is a wide-ranging and copious study of lexicographical pursuits from the Sumerian-Akkadian word lists of the second millenium BC through the contemporary period. It focuses almost exclusively on English-language sources after the sixteenth century or so (when the trend away from Latin began), but the author can hardly be faulted for this.

A scholarly treatment of the evolution of both the theory and practice of dictionary-making, Green's work is "not an academic history" (as he puts it in the preface) only in the sense that it is free of specialized philological jargon and readable by the lexicographical layman. It is not in any sense "popular history" in the sense that the term is currently used. Accessible, indeed, but hardly a breezy beach read.

Green leads the reader through the various stages of lexicographical development, and includes significant background on the debates which continue to occupy today's 'arbiters of language' - what words should be included? why, or why not? what is the lexicographer's proper role: documenter, or decider? Longstanding issues all, and none decided yet.

Chasing the Sun's most notable feature is its short biographical sketches of the great lexicographers of history, from those whose influence is quite forgotten today to those who at least many would recognize as having something to do with dictionaries (Johnson, Webster, Murray, e.g.). As I mentioned, the central focus for much of the work is England, but Green crosses the pond for two worthy chapters on American lexicography and the Webster-Worcester wars of the mid-19th century. Unfortunately (probably a function of some publisher-imposed page limit) Green's lengthy treatment of early efforts forces him to give short shrift to the OED, today's gold standard.

Of particular interest to Green is slang, to which he devotes two chapters here (practically if not particularly imaginatively named Slang I and Slang II), and which has been the subject of his other books. This was a good addition here; it complemented the rest of the work quite well.

Chasing the Sun concludes with Green's thoughts on the overall role of the lexicographer, which he sees as "to reflect the language, which in turn is a reflection of the culture in which it exists." He discourages censorship, noting "If the culture in part is racist, sexist, and in other was politically incorrect, then so too much the dictionaries be. The best they can offer is some parenthetical declaration that a given word or phrase, in a given defintion or usage, is so." And he points out that objective lexicography is oxymoronic; "to abandon all humanity, to achieve some Platonic perfection of an entirely disinterested dictionary is impossible."

A fine, deeply-considered work, and well worth the time it takes to read. Better and more useful footnotes would have been welcomed, but we'll take what we can get.

http://philobiblos.blogspot.com/2007/03/book-review-chasing-sun.html ( )
9 vota JBD1 | Mar 24, 2007 |
Lexicography > History
  Budzul | May 31, 2008 |
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"When I first engaged in this work, I resolved to leave neither words nor things unexamined, and pleased myself with a prospect of hours which I should revel away in feasts of literature, the obscure recesses of northern learning, which I should enter and ransack, the treasures with which I expected every search . . . to reward my labour, and the triumph with which I should display my acquisitions to mankind . . . But these were the dreams of a poet doomed at last to awaken a lexicographer . . . and that thus to pursue perfection was, like the first inhabitants of Arcadia, to chace the sun, which, when they had reached the hill where he seemed to rest, was still beheld at the same distance from them."

Samuel Johnson

Preface to The Dictionary of English Language, 1755
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In this book Jonathon Green traces the history of the dictionary from the first lexicon created in 2340 B.C. to the pinnacle of the Oxford English Dictionary and today's computer-generated successors of that great masterwork.

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