The Language Reformers of Lagado: Swift and the Myth of Linguistic Transparency
The Great Language Reform, lithography. AI image "We next went to the school of languages, where three professors sat in consultation upon improving that of their own country." — Jonathan Swift, Gulliver's Travels Introduction Imagine attending a scholarly conference where every participant arrives carrying sacks, baskets, tools, household objects, and perhaps a wheelbarrow or two. Instead of speaking, the scholars communicate by displaying physical objects. A discussion about agriculture requires seeds and farming tools. A debate on government demands maps, coins, and legal documents. A geologist presenting a lecture on the Earth’s formation must somehow transport a vast collection of rocks, minerals, and fossils that stand in for epochs and geological strata. The more learned the speaker, the heavier the burden. This is not a scene from a surrealist novel. It is one of the linguistic reforms proposed at the Academy of Lagado in Jonathan Swift's Gulliver...