Until Miss Nancy Mitford wrote on 'The English Aristocracy' in Encounter magazine, England was blissfully unconscious of 'U-usage' and all its lethal implications. The reverberations of that article spread rapidly from London throughout the British Isles, county and otherwise, and soon provided conversational pabulum at the U and non-U dinner-tables of English-speaking Paris and New York.
It all started from a paper written by Professor Alan Ross of Birmingham University, printed in Helsinki in 1954, on 'Upper-Class English Usage'. The Professor pointed out that it is solely by their language that the upper classes nowadays are distinguished and invented the useful formula: U speaker versus non-U speaker. He then gave examples from the vocabulary of each, and some of these are quoted in the article which Miss Mitford based on his treatise.
Miss Mitford's article was in due course implemented by 'Strix' in the Spectator; attacked by Mr Evelyn Waugh in Encounter; and became responsible for incidents in the Guards' Club, where certain unregenerate members continued to use the non-U expression 'Cheers!' before drinking.
Language
English
Format
Hardcover
Release
January 01, 1956
Noblesse Oblige: An Enquiry into the Identifiable Characteristics of the English Aristocracy
Until Miss Nancy Mitford wrote on 'The English Aristocracy' in Encounter magazine, England was blissfully unconscious of 'U-usage' and all its lethal implications. The reverberations of that article spread rapidly from London throughout the British Isles, county and otherwise, and soon provided conversational pabulum at the U and non-U dinner-tables of English-speaking Paris and New York.
It all started from a paper written by Professor Alan Ross of Birmingham University, printed in Helsinki in 1954, on 'Upper-Class English Usage'. The Professor pointed out that it is solely by their language that the upper classes nowadays are distinguished and invented the useful formula: U speaker versus non-U speaker. He then gave examples from the vocabulary of each, and some of these are quoted in the article which Miss Mitford based on his treatise.
Miss Mitford's article was in due course implemented by 'Strix' in the Spectator; attacked by Mr Evelyn Waugh in Encounter; and became responsible for incidents in the Guards' Club, where certain unregenerate members continued to use the non-U expression 'Cheers!' before drinking.