Saturday, July 24, 2004
Manipulating My Mother Tongue (on having a British Accent in the US)
July 12 issue - I was born with a silver spoon in my mouth. Or rather, I was born with a British accent in my mouth. Actually, to be honest, I wasn't born with the accent, I developed it while spending my formative years at a British boarding school. So I lied. But that's the point: here in America, it doesn't really matter whether I'm telling the truth. When I speak, most Americans believe me. And it's all thanks to my British accent.
![]() |
This acceptance of all things said in British translates elsewhere. Why do Americans love Tony Blair, ask friends back home? Because he seems so smartÂbecause he speaks proper. Brits also get away with murderÂor at least adulterous solicitationÂhere. The fact that Hugh Grant was busted with an L.A. hooker didn't matter to a lot of people, says one friend of mine. He had that accent, so the Yanks still thought he was "cute."
This is all quite liberating for us Brits. I can sprinkle my conversation with relatively vulgar Anglicisms like "wanker," "bugger" or "tosser" and still get the same response from American womenÂ"That is sooo cute!" (Who cares what it means?) If I tell a joke in British, people will often laugh even if they don't get itÂthey know that Brit equals wit.
What I love most, though, is that there really is no such thing as a British accent. The queen speaks her way, Brummies theirs, a Mancunian sounds nothing like a Liverpudlian, and Geordies sound more West Indian than West Country. It's said that in one Yorkshire town, two very distinct tongues are separated only by the main road. Britain, according to linguists, has one of the most diverse dialect pools on earth. And Americans simply can't get their heads around this. To them, traditional BBC English is British.
Actually, I must confess, I lied again in that last paragraph. What I really love most is that even though I've lived here for nine years running now and my accent has faded to the point of no return, I can still play off my speech. Unless I am introduced as British, many Americans don't even assume I am anymore. (Particularly if they know someone with a "real" British accent.) But, detecting just a hint of Brit, or noting a peculiar expression I use, they often ask me if I'm from "somewhere weirdÂlike Canada?" I've actually found that being a mystery is far more fun. At a party recently, I decided to revisit a joke I used to play when I had a strong boarding-school accent and clueless Americans still asked me where I was so obviously from. Intrigued by my peculiar patter, a young lady took the bait.
"You sound... You have an accent... Where are youÂ?"
"China, dahling," I informed her, in my best impersonation of BBC English.
"Really, how interesting," she replied, without a hint of sarcasm.
By Jove, I thought. I've still got it.
Do you Yahoo!?
New and Improved Yahoo! Mail - Send 10MB messages!
Quick Links
Representations of the Intellectual - Edward Said (Arabic)
Haven't I seen you somewhere before? - on uniformity of looks under capitalism
Martin Kramer: Said's Splash, From Ivory Towers on Sand
The Native Informant - Profile of Fouad Ajami
On Spivak's experience of writing Death of a Discipline
Altschuler, Glen C. "Let Me Edutain You." New York Times 4 Apr. 1999, sec. 4A: 50
