Divided into sections about menstruation, lust, reproduction, nurturing, working and aging, Mother Tongue also explores words describing male violence and emerging feminist language ... With painstaking detail, Nuttall chronicles how language controlled by men...codified ideas about women’s behavior and lives ... Touches on the hilarious and the devastating, with ample dashes of an ingredient so painfully absent from most discussions of sex and gender: humor.
Nuttall puts together a lexicon that, like a thesaurus, limits meaning to a few synonyms while seeming to expand it ... It’s striking, then, to examine the negative space in Nuttall’s project of recovery ... Mother Tongue isn’t dishonest, but just like a rushed piece of homework, its mission is overwhelmed by its own sense of exigency.
A nimble treatment of history that blends lexicographical analysis with personal reflections ... A fascinating primer on the origins of the English language ... If there is a protagonist in the book, it is Nuttall herself. With a confident voice, she conjures striking imagery.
Each chapter roves through time, picking salient points that result in a narrative, not a glossary. This makes Mother Tongue feel better suited to someone wishing to muse and draw connections than someone concerned with mapping changes over an exact interval ... This easily digestible and scenario-rich depiction of the evolution of language we take for granted is still done with care and compelling detail.