Based on the online
SpecGram archives, the journal has been published sporadically under several names (
Psammeticus Quarterly, Babel, and
The Journal of the Linguistic Society of South-Central New Caledonia) since 1988, with consecutive issues being anywhere from one month to six years apart. From 2004 to 2006, the journal was published more consistently on a quarterly basis. In 2007, the journal was published bimonthly, and from the summer of 2008 through 2021, it was published monthly. Since 2022, the journal has been published quarterly. The journal was first edited by Tim Pulju and Keith Slater (now Executive Editor), and is currently edited by Trey Jones (now
Editor-in-Chief).
Fictional history One of the conceits of the journal is that it has existed in one form or another, and has wielded great influence in world events, for hundreds of years (including implications of competing with the
Illuminati). This fictional history ("much of this rich and varied history is concocted
ad lib and
ad hoc") is occasionally revealed in pieces in Letters from the Editor. The first installment claims the journal was "founded by
Petrus Hispanus, one of the original
speculative grammarians, in 1276". Later installments trace the inconsistent and fantastical history through the present day. In June 2009, the fictional origin of the journal was pushed back almost four centuries, when the journal had a different name: "
Íslensk Tölvumálvísindi ['Icelandic Computational Linguistics'] was founded in Reykjavík in 881 by
Ingólfr Arnarson". The first issue available in the archives bearing the
Speculative Grammarian name is Vol. CXLVII, No. 1 from January 1993. However, the "Letter from the Managing Editor" for that issue makes it clear that, despite the assumption of a long previous history,
SpecGram is a continuation of the previously titled
Journal of the Linguistic Society of South-Central New Caledonia (the last issue of which was sub-titled
Langue du Monde). == Other satirical linguistics materials ==