Hing on a minty! A university has launched a Doric course in a bid to elevate the dialect from its associations with humour and ‘hame’ and place it on an equal footing with other languages.

Sunday, 13th September 2020, 7:30 am

Doric, a form of North East Scots that is spoken by 49 per cent of people in Aberdeenshire, will now be taught to undergraduates at Aberdeen University with the course counting towards a student’s degree.

The history of Doric is due to be taught on the course, as well as linguistics, vocabulary and its context in a European setting, with many words and phrases linking Doric with Scandinavian languages, said Dr Thomas McKean, director of Aberdeen University’s Elphinstone Institute which researches and protects the North East’s distinct cultural heritage.

He said: “It’s about building a parity of esteem of the language so that it is thought of in equal terms with other European languages.

“Doric has rules, it has vocabulary and its speakers have a certain way of looking at the world – that goes with any language.

“If you lose any language or lose any aspect of a language, you lose something that is unique. The university is an institution of the North East of Scotland so it is important that the language is reflected within the walls of the university. It is important that the university is connected to its region.

“The course is also about taking the language seriously as a cultural asset.”

Doric has a long history in literature, songs and poetry as well as humour, with the hugely popular Scotland The What? comedy show taking the gentle rise out of Doric speakers and their native land, with many of the sketches set in the fictional Aberdeenshire village Auchterturra.

Dr McKean said there was a great tradition of Doric humour but that a “balance needed to be redressed” in order to empower the language.

He said: “Many people associate Doric with humour, and rightly so as there’s a great tradition of self-aware humour here, but if it is only seen through this lens, the power and status of the language is soon undermined.

Scotland the What? is the best-known example today, but going back to the Music Hall days there’s a strong vein of humorous songs and literature making fun of rustic folks and their way of speaking. Dialects become associated with humour and lose currency as languages to be used for ‘serious’ things, like civic life, science, serious media. By putting it on the stage at the university, we go some way in redressing the balance.”

Dr McKean said he tried to convince the BBC to do a daily North-East news bulletin in Doric/North-East Scots, but was told ‘you can’t talk about things like funerals or disasters in Doric’.

He added: “This is rubbish, of course, as people, in their homes, do that every single day. The use of dialect as a means of social control goes way back, here and in many cultures. It’s a way of disempowering certain groups – usually rural, ‘unsophisticated’, potentially troublesome groups.”

He said that, rather than Doric being ‘old fashioned’, it was widely spoken by young people with a study into how Doric is used in social media underway at Banff Academy.

Aberdeenshire Council has drawn up plans to introduce teaching of Doric in its schools.

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