'Thoroughly researched using an impressive range of sources from antiquarian to contemporary creative writing; and written with fluency and authority. This is the nearest thing to a definitive history of scouse.'<br /><i><b>University of Liverpool</b></i>
'An enthralling book... Tony Crowley has written a book many of us have wanted to read for a long time.' <br /><i><b>Michael O'Neil, Durham University</b></i>
'Tony Crowley’s searching book starts with a rigorous study of historic sources, their modern interpretations and the insights of contemporary linguistic theory. The conventional view has been that, in the 1840s, a warm front of Irish immigration came up against an unyielding mass of Lancashire grittiness, rough and dour. So superficially appealing has this explanation been that it’s gone largely unquestioned until now, even by serious historians. Crowley places the emergence of a distinctive Liverpool accent a great deal earlier – but that of “Scouse” as comparatively recent. In doing so, he opens up much wider questions of place, class and identity; of how people are seen and come to see themselves.'<br /><i><b>The Scotsman</b></i>
- Acknowledgements
- Preface, Liverpool: Language, culture and history
- 1. The sea, slavery and strangers: observations on the making of early modern Liverpool and its culture
- 2. Language in Liverpool: the received history and an alternative thesis
- 3. Language and a sense of place: the beginnings of 'Scouse'
- 4. Frank Shaw and the founding of the 'Scouse industry'
- 5. What is 'Scouse'? Historical and theoretical issues
- 6. Liverpools: places, histories, differences
- Appendix: Stories of words: naming the place, naming the people
- Bibliography
- Index