Sarah Ogilvie on The Dictionary People

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Sarah Ogilvie on The Dictionary People: The Unsung Heroes Who Created the Oxford English Dictionary

Tuesday 20 February, 5.30-7pm 

Leonard Wolfson Auditorium, Wolfson College

Free Event

 

Sarah Ogilvie will give a short talk and then be joined by Hermione Lee in conversation, to discuss her recent book The Dictionary People. Followed by audience Q&A.

She will reflect on her discovery of the 150 year-old address books belonging to Sir James Murray, the longest serving editor of the first edition of the Oxford English Dictionary. Therein lay the names and addresses of three thousand people around the world who helped created the Dictionary between 1858 and its completion in 1928. Sarah spent eight years researching their lives. Far from the learned elites, it turns out that most of these people were amateurs and autodidacts, and many more women than previously thought. They included female archeologists, astronomers and suffragists; inmates of psychiatric hospitals; vegetarian vicars; the inventor of the tennis net adjuster; three murderers, a pornography collector, and a cocaine addict found dead in a railway station lavatory. This is a story of devotion and obsession that shines a light on many lives previously unknown and unsung. 

Dr Sarah Ogilvie is Senior Research Fellow in Linguistics, and Fellow of Campion Hall, at the University of Oxford. She specialises in language, dictionaries, and technology. Her latest book, The Dictionary People: the unsung heroes of the Oxford English Dictionary, is published by Chatto and Windus. 

Photo credit: Robert Taylor

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