This article was in today's Chicago Tribune -- thought I'd share. 

:-)

-Carla


http://www.chicagotribune.com/features/lifestyle/chi-1009languageoct09,0
,5014466,print.story

AT RANDOM: ON LANGUAGE
Blogger: Web site's all in fun, and you can quote me on that

By Nathan Bierma

Special to the Tribune

October 9, 2007

Bethany Keeley, the blogger behind "The 'Blog' of 'Unnecessary'
Quotation Marks" (quotation-marks.blogspot.com), says she isn't a member
of the punctuation police and doesn't want to be.

"The grammar police want to claim me for themselves, but they're never
going to get me onboard," Keeley said in a telephone interview.

That's because her punctuation spying is purely for fun, not anger
management, says Keeley, a doctoral student in rhetoric at the
University of Georgia.

Keeley collects pictures of signs that use quotation marks in
questionable places, and posts them on her Web log. She finds it
entertaining to pretend that quotation marks that are used for emphasis
instead indicate insincerity, sarcasm or euphemism.

For example, when a reader submitted a photo of a hotel sign telling
guests, Please 'Do Not Remove' our guest towels, Keeley imagined the
quotation marks made the phrase sarcastic. "Maybe they say 'Do Not
Remove' because they really mean 'go ahead and take them, so we can
charge you outrageous prices for them,'" she wrote.

A reader in Milwaukee sent in a picture of a sign that read, Floor Space
For Rent: 'Reasonable' -- Inquire Within, with the quotation marks
making you wonder how reasonable the rates really are.

A sign at a Super 8 in Sioux Falls, S.D., told customers Your
cooperation is 'sincerely appreciated,' but the quotation marks made the
sign seem anything but sincere.

A recent wave of attention has boosted traffic to Keeley's blog and made
Keeley -- whom I know from Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Mich., which
we both attended -- an unlikely blogger celebrity. Last month Keeley's
blog was the Pick of the Day at Yahoo (picks.yahoo.com), and was
featured in an Associated Press report that appeared on the Web sites of
the New York Times and Washington Post.

The AP headline read, "Blogger 'Exposes' Annoying Quote Abuse," but
Keeley says she isn't annoyed and doesn't consider questionable quotes a
matter of abuse. She's uneasy about being celebrated by supporters of
Lynne Truss, the acerbic author of the best-selling screed "Eats, Shoots
and Leaves" who cheekily threatens bodily harm to punctuation perps.

"In most cases I'm intentionally misinterpreting people," Keeley says.
"What they mean to say is clear. I'm mostly just trying to have a little
fun with language."

Even before he knew about Keeley's blog, linguist John McWhorter wrote
an opinion article in the New York Sun arguing that quotation marks can
be considered legitimate indications of emphasis in non-standard English
(especially on hand-written signs, where bold and italics are difficult
to use).

"Call it the new boldface," McWhorter wrote. "It is an understandable
mistake. Quotations set off something, and it's a short step from
setting something off to emphasizing it."

I asked McWhorter in a telephone interview if it's still reasonable to
chuckle at emphatic quotation marks, even if the usage is
understandable.

"It's a little snobbish, but we're all human," McWhorter said.

----------

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