About This Book
A brusque phonetician accepts a wager to teach a working-class street seller to speak with upper-class accents so she can pass at social gatherings; the experiment succeeds but upends expectations about class, identity, and autonomy, revealing how speech shapes social standing and personal dignity. Through witty dialogue and satirical set pieces, the work probes power imbalances, the performative nature of manners, and the human cost of social transformation.
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