Modern thinkers long have been troubled by everyday talk. For example, one nineteenth-century Tory critic observes, “General small-talk” is any exchange “in mixed society, where men and women, young and old, wise and foolish, are all mingled together.” However available the occasion or obvious the topics, chatting is easy for the talented but awkward for the ungifted. On the other hand, “special, or professional small talk” is an exchange of words between persons of “the same mode of life, as between two apothecaries, two dissenters, two lawyers, two beggars, two reviewers, two butlers, two statements, two thieves, &c.&c.&c.; in short all conversations which are tinctured with the art, craft, mystery, occupation, or habits of the interlocutors” (Campbell et al. 1823). For those who can mingle, chat blossoms. For others, social occasions are always awkward, even dreaded. The traditional, elevated, polite arts of conversation were passing in the entrepreneurial, vernacular,...
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Book Review|
June 01 2022
The Chattering Mind: A Conceptual History of Everyday Talk
The Chattering Mind: A Conceptual History of Everyday Talk
. By Samuel McCormick. Chicago
: University of Chicago Press
, 2020
. 326 pp. Hardcover $105.00. ISBN: 9780226677637.Philosophy & Rhetoric (2022) 55 (2): 202–207.
Citation
G. Thomas Goodnight; The Chattering Mind: A Conceptual History of Everyday Talk. Philosophy & Rhetoric 1 June 2022; 55 (2): 202–207. doi: https://doi.org/10.5325/philrhet.55.2.0202
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