Watch Your Words
A Manifesto for the Arts of Speech

1. Auflage Februar 2025
Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
Never before has humanity done so much talking. But is anyone listening? For that matter, are people even speaking to each other?
We need to acknowledge that speech, as we know it, has never been so debased. We live in a world full of empty, degraded, and potentially violent speech: a daily reality that confronts us in the workplace, in the media, on the streets, on the internet, and in our political lives. Verbal clashes are commonplace, while proper dialogue is rare.
Gérald Garutti pushes for a return to a more constructive and responsible form of speech. He lays the groundwork for a humanistic approach: one which, contrary to the dominant culture of ignoring and humiliating others, emphasizes listening to them and mastering speech as a way of connecting. The arts of speech can contribute to the reconciliation of tensions in our society and to the realization of our full humanity.
Watch Your Words is a stunning manifesto for anyone interested in how we might better communicate with each other.
PART I
The Diminution of our Humanity
The Radical Degradation of Speech
1 Watch how you speak
2 The Other does not exist
3 Subject not at home
PART II
For a humanism of speech
4 We need to stand up in the full sense for what we say
5 Elevating speech
PART III
Humanity lost, humanity regained
Speech Elevated
6 The seven arts of speech. Cultivating our humanity
7 The Centre for the arts of speech
Notes
Willi Goetschel, University of Toronto
"Beginning with the simplest of propositions, "we must value speech properly", Garutti tears into linguistic degradation in our time with depth, comprehensiveness, and knife-like clarity. His plea for linguistic restitution as an "ethics of reciprocity" is equally simple, well articulated, and urgent. Translated by Raymond Geuss, who places the book within the genre of the manifesto, Watch Your Words is a must-read which should be widely discussed."
Daniel Herwitz, University of Michigan
"A passionate and timely plea to restore dignity and value to human speech. Reminding us that we are what we say, Garutti's manifesto is in fact a practical guide to what Michel Foucault once praised as "the courage of the truth" made manifest in speech, action, and life."
James I. Porter, University of California, Berkeley