Each and every language has semantics and semiotics associated with it. These can be considered to represent the structure of a language. Technology can cause immense changes in the dynamics of a language. This can be demonstrated best if we consider filmmaking or photography to be a language. The ‘visual’ languages are most affected by technology. As advancements in technology have been made, films and photographs have completely changed! From the black and white silent films of Charlie Chaplin we have come to the purely digital realm of a film like “300”. I talk about all this before getting down to the issue of online communication simply because I want to illustrate that technology has completely altered the experience that gazing at a photograph or viewing a film has been. Altered the way in which our emotions are affected by these experiences.
Online communication clearly deals with the languages that we use in every day life in order to communicate with one another through the medium of words. We communicate online through the internet and the short messaging service provided by the cellular providers. In the past few years it has become clear that the English language has been greatly affected because of online communication! Youngsters these days have no qualms in quite literally murdering traditional English usage and communicating in what appears to be a different language altogether! Vowels are often skipped, sentences are broken, punctuation is ignored in most cases and to top it all, the ‘text’ is interspersed with strange looking emoticons.
Hmmm... 30 minutes... 500 words... Not bad I'd say. Posting it as I wrote it under those constraints. Not very good work by any means. Under the circumstances? Nice.
2 comments:
interesting, but wouldn't you say there's a certain (very noticeable) loss due to the spread of this new language? consider the way in which youngsters have become rather lazy because they know they don't have to follow any guidelines anymore, they don't need to know grammar or their spellings anymore, simply because no one gives a damn. it seems as though ability is being sacrificed for convenience.
As I said in my post, there is no doubt that the grammar of the english language has been GREATLY affected coz of this online lingo. No two ways about it! But this lingo is also in a sense reflective of society isn't it? The fact that people are OK with a lot of things now. Society is more free and a lot less rigid when it comes to everyday conversations which take place thru SMSes, online chats et al. The English lang is in a sense evolving with the times. Will there be a day when we see emoticons in newspapers?
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