Hello, Goodbye

Steve Jobs’ last words were: “Oh wow. Oh wow. Oh wow.” Oscar Wilde went with: “Either that wallpaper goes, or I do.” (At least, that’s how the story goes.) But the way most of us part company with language at the end of our lives is more halting and gradual. Even when a dying loved one is unable to speak clearly, other forms of communication often take over: noises, gestures, touch and eye contact. We have stories in this episode from a hospice nurse, from journalists covering mental health and internet culture, and from language writer Michael Erard who is writing a book about last words and their relationship to first words. The author mentioned in the abstract talks about “biological death” vs “social death” and how living people are involved in both. Dying alone seems like the definition of a “bad death,” which led him to write the book about last words – even though they aren’t usually any more profound or meaningful than first words. This is a linguistics-focused podcast so there’s an orientation to language acquisition that will make this useful to a language class – Spanish or English – without being too distracting for a non-language class.

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