Disc 1
Episode 1
Where did English come from? Brought to England by invading Germanic tribes beginning in the 5th century, Anglo-Saxon displaced the Celtic language and took root. It found its greatest expression in the epic poem Beowulf and its staunchest champion in Alfred Ithe only English monarch ever honored with the epithet "Great."
Episode 2
After the Norman Conquest of 1066, England became a bilingual landFrench for the rulers, English for the common folk. How did French affect the development of English? Why didn’t we all end up speaking French? And how did Chaucer’s classic Canterbury Taleswritten in Middle Englishinfluence what we read today?
Disc 2
Episode 3
Until the 16th century, Latin was the language of religion in England. But revolutionaries such as William Tyndale dared to translate the Bible into English so that everyonenot just the clergycould read and interpret it. The movement changed history and profoundly affected the language we now use.
Episode 4
In the 15th and 16th centuries, English positively exploded with new words from faraway lands, imported by a bustling maritime trade. The result was a rich, fertile language cultivated by courtier poets like Sir Philip Sidney and brought to bloom by the Renaissance playwrightsmost notably, William Shakespeare.
Disc 3
Episode 5
England exported its language to the New World, where it underwent further transformation. Absorbing words and expressions from French, Spanish, Native American tongues, and African dialectsas well as creating some colorful ones of its ownAmerican English grew vigorously.
Episode 6
During the Enlightenment, advances in science, technology, and commerce brought a flood of new words into the language. Subsequent efforts to codify and standardize English included Samuel Johnson’s monumental dictionary and Thomas Sheridan’s elocution exercises, aimed at eliminating regional and class-based distinctions in speech.
Disc 4
Episode 7
Was the English language an instrument of colonial oppression, or the means to introduce ideas such as freedom and democracy? The British colonies of India, the Caribbean, and Australia yielded different answersand wholly different English dialects.
Episode 8
Thanks largely to the overwhelming economic, military, and cultural influence of the United States during the 20th century, English has become a truly global tongue, used by about a third of the world’s population as either a first or second language. How does English continue to evolve today?
Packaging:Thinpak
Run Time:405 minutes
Format:Widescreen
Number of discs:4
Language:English
Subtitles:N/A
Color or B&W:Color
CC:No
SDH:Yes
Region Code:1
Aspect Ratio:16:9
Rating:N/A
"It's high-minded and educational, but brings its lessons down to earth and can even be fun."DVD Verdict
Gets it wrong about English in the American Plantations
3 Stars
from VA on 11/21/2011 12:56:05 PM wrote:
For this documentary to start American English exportation with the "Pilgrims" at Plymouth Plantation is a continuation of historical prestigious both in England and the United States. English was first brought to North America to the Raleigh's failed plantation at Roanoke, North Carolina. In 1609, English proprietors established Jamestown. The settlement failed, but the survivors spread out to establish a Royal Colony.
The fact is that the Plymouth Colony has been lionized as being the precursors of the American system is a anti-southern post-civil war concept that this British historian has not researched.
I have liked the series up until British historians with a Parliamentarian sympathy dismiss the majority of the Atlantic plantations that were Royalist during the Cromwell Tyranny. These plantations adopted neutrality for self-preservation.
English lovers, buy this--it's great!
4 Stars
from on 11/22/2010 12:00:00 AM wrote:
I am a 6th grade English teacher, and it was informative for me. I also can see using certain short portions for the students (avoiding some parts entirely--i.e. recitation of nicknames for the male genitalia.) Overall it was most enjoyable to watch. My family (all adults now) loved it.