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An Illustrated Book of Loaded Language: Learn to Hear What's Left Unsaid
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An Illustrated Book of Loaded Language: Learn to Hear What's Left Unsaid
Current price: $16.95
Barnes and Noble
An Illustrated Book of Loaded Language: Learn to Hear What's Left Unsaid
Current price: $16.95
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
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“This is a book for every thinking person, the perfect antidote to today’s culture wars.”—Hope Jahren The creators of
An Illustrated Book of Bad Arguments
return with this desperately timely guide to how words can trick us. Learn to “hear” hidden bias, slant, and spin—from an irresistible cast of woodland creatures!
Public discourse? More like public discord. The battle cries of our culture wars are rife with “loaded language”—be it bias, slant, or spin. But listen closely, or you’ll miss what Ali Almossawi finds more frightening still: words that erase accountability, history, even identity through what they leave
un
said. Speaking as wise old Mr. Rabbit, Almossawi leads us through a dark forest of rhetoric—aided by Orwell, Baldwin, and a squee-worthy cast of wide-eyed woodland creatures. Here,
passive voice
can pardon wrongdoers,
statistics
may be a smokescreen,
gaslighting
entraps the downtrodden, and
irrelevant adjectives
cement stereotypes. Emperor Squirrel isn’t naked; he has a
clothes-free sartorial style
. Mouse’s roof
becomes flattened
(Elephant’s foot just happens to be there at the time). And when keen-eyed Owl
claims
a foreign shore, he seems to be overlooking someone . . . Fans of Almossawi’s
couldn’t ask for a better primer on the
less
logical ways that words can trick us. It takes a long pair of ears to hear what’s left unsaid—but when you’re a rabbit in a badger world, listening makes all the difference.
An Illustrated Book of Bad Arguments
return with this desperately timely guide to how words can trick us. Learn to “hear” hidden bias, slant, and spin—from an irresistible cast of woodland creatures!
Public discourse? More like public discord. The battle cries of our culture wars are rife with “loaded language”—be it bias, slant, or spin. But listen closely, or you’ll miss what Ali Almossawi finds more frightening still: words that erase accountability, history, even identity through what they leave
un
said. Speaking as wise old Mr. Rabbit, Almossawi leads us through a dark forest of rhetoric—aided by Orwell, Baldwin, and a squee-worthy cast of wide-eyed woodland creatures. Here,
passive voice
can pardon wrongdoers,
statistics
may be a smokescreen,
gaslighting
entraps the downtrodden, and
irrelevant adjectives
cement stereotypes. Emperor Squirrel isn’t naked; he has a
clothes-free sartorial style
. Mouse’s roof
becomes flattened
(Elephant’s foot just happens to be there at the time). And when keen-eyed Owl
claims
a foreign shore, he seems to be overlooking someone . . . Fans of Almossawi’s
couldn’t ask for a better primer on the
less
logical ways that words can trick us. It takes a long pair of ears to hear what’s left unsaid—but when you’re a rabbit in a badger world, listening makes all the difference.