Jonathon Green

For people with a similar name, see Jonathan Green (disambiguation).

Jonathon Green (born 20 April 1948 in Kidderminster, Worcestershire) is a British lexicographer of slang and writer on the history of alternative cultures. Jonathon Green is often referred to as the English-speaking world’s leading lexicographer of slang,[1] and has even been described as 'The most acclaimed British lexicographer since Johnson'.[2]

Life and career

Of Jewish origin,[3] Green was educated at Bedford School (1961-1965) and Brasenose College, Oxford (1966-1969) where he read history.[3]

An author, freelance journalist, broadcaster and lecturer, Green's primary activity is the collection and analysis of slang. To this end, he has amassed a database, which – according to Green – holds around 125,000 slang words and phrases, underpinned by over 550,000 citations (examples of usage). It covers English-language slang since the 16th century and offers the vocabularies of the UK, US, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland and the anglophone Caribbean. This database provides a resource for all his slang-related publications.

For Green, slang is as much a part of the greater English language as any other of its sub-sets such as dialect or technicalities. But unlike those, it opts for an actively oppositional role. With a conscious acknowledgement of the Counterculture of the 1960s (in which he played a part and of which he has written) he has termed slang the ‘counter-language’ and more recently ‘the language that says "no"'.[4] Born at the margins it has remained there, even if the secrecy that lay at the heart of older slang cannot resist the information flow of the modern world.

The sixties counterculture was the subject of his first oral history, Days in the Life: Voices from the English Underground 1961-1971 (1988), for which he "interviewed more than 100 of "the main players", acquiring 500,000 words on tape and a 400,000-word manuscript; "the book emerged around half this length."[3] The study All Dressed Up: The Sixties and the Counterculture (1998) was the source of litigation, from both former Beatle George Harrison and artist Caroline Coon, and was withdrawn for 12 months.[3] In June 2000, Coon received damages of £40,000, plus £33,000 costs, from publisher Random House, for the false claims Green had made.[5]

Authority on slang

The single-volume Chambers Slang Dictionary (Chambers Harrap) was first published in 1998; a second edition appeared in October 2008.

Green’s most substantial work in this field is Green's Dictionary of Slang: a three volume slang work which traces, via examples and citations drawn from the last five centuries, the history of the slang vocabulary from the earliest use of every term. It includes slang from across the English-speaking world. It was published in the UK in late November 2010 and in the US in March 2011. An e-book version has been released as part of the Oxford Digital Reference Shelf collection. Green's Dictionary of Slang was awarded the 2012 Dartmouth Medal – an annual award from the Reference and User Services Association (RUSA) recognizing the most outstanding reference work of the year.

His most recent publications are Language! 500 Years of the Vulgar Tongue (Atlantic Books 2014) and Odd Job Man: Some Confessions of a Slang Lexicographer (Jonathan Cape 2014) Green lives in London and Paris.

The much-expanded, revised and corrected digital edition of Green's Dictionary of Slang will be launched on line on October 12 2016 at https://greensdictofslang.com

Publications

Language
Dictionaries and Related Publications
Dictionaries of quotations
Oral Histories
Miscellaneous Publications
Contributor
Consultant

References

  1. See, for example, the author biography on Green’s article " Antisemitic insults: a lexicon published in Engage, and the introduction to another audio interview, "Jonathon Green – 5th July 2007", published in The Generalist.
  2. Tonkin, Boyd (28 November 2008). "Fact and fun with the stars of geek heaven". The Independent.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Nick Groom "'I could say it 1,000 ways and they'd probably all offend'", Times Higher Education Supplement, 9 June 2000
  4. Introduction. Green, Jonathon (October 2008). Chambers Slang Dictionary. Chambers Harrap. pp. xi. ISBN 978-0-550-10439-7.
  5. Michael Smith "Sex-for-charity slur costs £40,000", Daily Telegraph, 13 June 2000

External links

Interviews and podcasts

Reviews

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