Benjamin Franklin, Orthoepist and Phonetician Vol. 1: Language, Literacy and Social Mobility in Franklin’s World - cover image

Book Series

Copyright

Gary D. German

ISBN

Paperback978-1-80511-612-7
Hardback978-1-80511-613-4
PDF978-1-80511-614-1
HTML978-1-80511-616-5
EPUB978-1-80511-615-8

Language

  • English

Funding

  • The Philological Society

THEMA

  • CFF
  • CFH
  • CFB
  • DNBH
  • NHK
  • JBCC9

BISAC

  • LAN009010
  • LAN011000
  • LAN009050
  • HIS036030
  • BIO006000
  • SOC024000

Keywords

  • Orthography
  • Historical Phonology
  • Historical Sociolinguistics
  • Benjamin Franklin
  • dialectology
  • New Englishes
  • Reformed Mode of Spelling (RMS)

    Benjamin Franklin, Orthoepist and Phonetician

    Vol. 1: Language, Literacy and Social Mobility in Franklin’s World

    • Gary D. German (author)
    FORTHCOMING

    Benjamin Franklin has been hailed as an inventor, scientist, printer, author, philosopher, diplomat, philanthropist and political activist and, especially, a founding father of the United States, but few are aware he was also a phonetician. This book offers a groundbreaking exploration of Franklin’s little-studied linguistic legacy—his Reformed Mode of Spelling (1768/1779). In this short treatise, Franklin outlined a plan for a radical, phonetically-based modernization of the English spelling system that would simultaneously serve as a pronunciation guide for what he envisaged to be 'correct' English as well as a practical scheme allowing the unlettered and foreigners to learn to read and write ‘within a week’. The social and sociolinguistic reasons for its inception as well as what that model entailed linguistically are the focus of this book.

    Moreover, while Franklin’s fascination with English orthographic reform is known among specialists, previous studies have rarely taken his reform seriously. This is the first comprehensive linguistic analysis of his phonetic system within the broader historical and sociolinguistic context of early American English, a study which also includes comparative analyses of 17th and 18th century English varieties. Drawing on an impressive array of archival and manuscript sources—some previously unknown—Gary German reconstructs Franklin’s linguistic environment and investigates how his proposed spelling reform functioned as both a phonetic guide as well as a political and cultural statement.

    The book employs a robust historical sociolinguistic methodology which, for the first time, distinguishes between Franklin’s native American pronunciation and that proposed in his RMS. The data presented offer a persuasive answer to the question of whether his model was ‘English’ or ‘American’ while also exploring speaker networks and personal correspondence to trace linguistic patterns.

    This study is a vital contribution to historical linguistics, American studies, and the growing field of World Englishes. With its detailed analysis and interdisciplinary appeal, it sheds new light on both Franklin’s intellectual world and the complex phonological landscape of early American-English. It is essential reading for linguists, historians, and anyone fascinated by the roots of American English.

    Endorsements

    This monumental book is the first comprehensive treatment of Benjamin Franklin’s Reformed Mode of Spelling and of the social and sociolinguistic factors underlying its inception. It was in this treatise that Franklin presented his radically modernized English spelling system that could also serve as a pronunciation guide aimed at helping people speak ‘correct English’ at the time. The reader will learn, for the first time, about the new discoveries in the archival documentation of relevance to Franklin’s work and about the full scope of the very linguistics of his phonological system.

    Merja Kytö

    Uppsala University, Sweden

    Additional Resources

    Readings from Franklin’s Poor Richard’s Almanack and his Reformed Mode of Spelling

    This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0).

    This license allows you to share, copy, distribute and transmit the text; to adapt the text for non-commercial purposes of the text providing attribution is made to the authors (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work). Attribution should include the following information:

    Gary D. German, Benjamin Franklin, Orthoepist and Phonetician. Vols. 1-2. Cambridge, UK: Open Book Publishers, 2026, https://doi.org/10.11647/OBP.0470 and https://doi.org/10.11647/OBP.0537


    Contributors

    Gary D. German

    (author)

    Gary D. (Manchec) German is a dual French and American national. Born in Paris, he was raised in a multilingual household with family roots in Finistère, Lancashire, North Wales, and the United States (Massachusetts and Virginia). He holds two PhDs (in Breton dialectology and in the sociolinguistics/linguistics of Welsh English) and an Habilitation à Diriger des Recherches (English sociolinguistics). He is Emeritus Professor of English at the Université de Bretagne Occidentale, Brest, where he taught English phonology and grammar, historical linguistics, and sociolinguistics from 1999 to 2018. He has been a member of the Centre de Recherche Bretonne et Celtique (UBO) for over forty-five years. In this capacity, he taught Breton historical phonology, Breton dialectology and Middle Welsh literature. Previously, he taught English language and linguistics at the Universities of Nantes, Poitiers as well as French and English at George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia.