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Happy Birthday, The Elements of Style?

Yesterday was the 50th anniversary of Strunk and White’s The Elements of Style. Not everyone is excited to celebrate though — Geoffrey K. Pullum, head of linguistics and English language at the University of Edinburgh, takes on the famous book in  this article — “50 Years of Stupid Grammar Advice” — in The Chronicle of Higher Education.

As much as I love being, to my friends anyway, the grammar nerd, my technical knowledge of grammar isn’t that great. That’s why a lot of Pullum’s critiques of The Elements of Style were just a bit over my head. However, he does make a good point that if Strunk and White weren’t as great at grammar as everyone thinks they were, then this is a poor book to be using as the basis for grammar education in schools.

His best argument, in my opinion, is that Strunk and White’s advice comes off as just a bit bossy and not really grammatical. He notes,

The book’s contempt for its own grammatical dictates seems almost willful, as if the authors were flaunting the fact that the rules don’t apply to them. But I don’t think they are. Given the evidence that they can’t even tell actives from passives, my guess would be that it is sheer ignorance. They know a few terms, like “subject” and “verb” and “phrase,” but they do not control them well enough to monitor and analyze the structure of what they write.

There is of course nothing wrong with writing passives and negatives and adjectives and adverbs. I’m not nitpicking the authors’ writing style. White, in particular, often wrote beautifully, and his old professor would have been proud of him. What’s wrong is that the grammatical advice proffered in Elements is so misplaced and inaccurate that counterexamples often show up in the authors’ own prose on the very same page.

I think that’s probably my biggest concern with the way grammar is taught — as a series of “dos” and “don’ts” that have little basis in what actually makes good writing. Sure, you have to give some kids strict rules in order for them to learn to write, but those strict rules then scare people into taking the leap to becoming good writer. They’ve been told so many times “Never start a sentence with a conjunction” or “Never use the passive voice” that they’re afraid to break the rules when necessary.

I never learned grammar from The Elements of Style; in fact, I didn’t get a good grammar class until I was a junior in college.  In that class, we learned how sentences are constructed and the pieces that make up the English language, but were never given a set of rules for things we could and couldn’t do which was a huge blessing. My grammar isn’t awesome, but at this point it is good enough and flexible enough to know when it’s alright to “break the rules” so I can write the sentence I want to write.

How did you learn grammar in school? Have you ever been taught grammar? What’s the best or worst piece of grammar advice you’ve ever recieved?

Comments on this entry are closed.

  • GoldenMoonCasinoMississippi April 17, 2009, 8:59 am

    Very good stuff, thanks for the review.

  • Lu April 17, 2009, 9:24 am

    I didn’t have a good grammar class either, when I was in middle school. Then I got to high school and we lost so many points for misplaced commas that I had to teach myself all the rules. I read “Eats, Shoots and Leaves.” Such a good book!

  • Jeanne April 17, 2009, 10:07 am

    Like most of the writing tutors who work for me, I learned “intuitive grammar” from reading. Once in college a friend showed me how to diagram a sentence, because I’d read about it but never seen it done.

    Best advice: use a semicolon (instead of a comma) to connect two sentences
    Worst advice: don’t end a sentence with a preposition

  • BiblioMom April 17, 2009, 11:49 am

    I wish I had better grammar. There are parts of grammar and punctuation that I just can’t seem to grasp no matter how hard I try. My problem is that I write how I talk and that’s not the best thing. In High School and College I was worried about my thoughts and getting that across that I paid little or no attention to the specifics of HOW I did. I have to say that I enjoy The Elements of Style. There is something comfortable about that little book. There are parts that are outdated and overly critical but it’s still a definitive work of grammar.

  • Memory April 17, 2009, 11:54 am

    I learned basic grammar in elementary school, but I picked most of it up on the fly. I read a lot as a young child, and I ended up absorbing grammar on an instinctive level.

  • Susannah April 17, 2009, 2:04 pm

    I, too, picked up most of it on the fly, reading a lot of things from a lot of different sources. I do remember, though, that even though I had m4d sk1llz with most stuff in fourth grade, I did have to take the “commas inside/outside quotation marks” test twice because I got a D on it the first time… and I actually did worse on it the second time! Ack!

    Nowadays, I’m pretty good except for the whole “titles in quotation marks at the end of sentences” issue.

    The one thing I picked up much later — probably early college, actually — was who/whom. I remember it because you should use “whom” with anything where you could use “him.” But that’s pretty much the extent of it. We had a language usage and grammar course in high school (aka LUG, a name which sounded about as exciting as the class itself), and I just cannot imagine the heights of excitement they must have reached.

  • Susannah April 17, 2009, 2:09 pm

    Oh, and the best piece of advice I ever got: elimination of “to be” verbs, breaking me of my passive voice habit and tightening up my writing immeasurably. Last hour, last semester of high school. A couple years later I had a prof who made fun of people who teach their students to avoid those verbs, but I found her ridiculous in just about every way, so ignoring her was easy 🙂

  • Teresa April 17, 2009, 4:11 pm

    I was lucky enough to get formal grammar instruction in high school, using a grammar textbook that had us identifying subjects and objects, putting commas in the right place, writing complex-compound sentences, etc. I don’t think you need that kind of technical knowledge to be a good writer, but it’s invaluable to me in my day job as a copyeditor.

    I do like Strunk and White as a style guide, not a rule book. Their advice is generally sound because it identifies errors that lots of beginning writers make without thinking about it. But I do know a fair number of writers and editors who do exactly what Pullam says and treat it is a rule book and do whatever they can to avoid the passive voice, even if in some cases, the passive voice is the best solution.

    And when it comes to grammatical teaching, I find that so many so-called rules, such as not splitting infinitives or never ending a sentence with a prepostion, are just arbitrary ideas that came into fashion at some point and that people still follow for no good reason. Personally, I’d rather see split infinitives than subjects and verbs that don’t agree.

  • Care April 17, 2009, 6:15 pm

    I remember being so glad when I graduated out of grammar classes and into literature classes! and then I chose a tech major in college and never had any word-fun and writing-fun again. Well, not until I got into blogging about books.

  • Rebecca Reid April 18, 2009, 7:48 am

    I remember liking Strunk and White when I read it years ago. After reading the critique of it, i want to revisit it just to see what it’s about. Very interesting.

    I agree that grammar shouldn’t just be “dos” and “don’ts” but I do think we’ve come pretty lax about “rules” and I think it helps to have some structure before we go and break them. But you’re right: it shouldn’t scare us away from them.

  • Sherrie April 18, 2009, 11:19 am

    Hi Kim,
    I’ve got my Week 7 posted for the Blog Improvement Project. Have a great week end!

    Sherrie

  • theexile April 20, 2009, 2:04 pm

    Learned things like parts of speech, types of sentences—declaritive, imperative, etc.—punctuation (although really didn’t get a good grasp of using semicolons until reading Faulkner in grad school) from elementary school through high school. But along the way really didn’t learn good writing skills until freshman comp. Even through undergrad my grammar could be spotty. Then gave myself a crash course by reading Elements of Style.

    I would have to suggest reading Arthur Plotnik’s Spunk & Bite as a rebuttal of Strunk and White.