Is the usage of "speaks to" new? Is it American?
Two examples from Google:
Doris McCarthy exhibit speaks to the artist as lover of life
and
A scribble that speaks to wild nature of art
Is this use of 'speaks to' new? I seem to have only started to hear it about a year ago, and now I hear it everywhere. Is it American?
This post on Language Log is interesting. It suggests that "speak to [some concept]" has been documented since about 400 years ago, though there's some disagreement about how long it's been used in news publishing.
Personally, I think it feels awkward, as though there must be some neater, more established verb we could drop in instead, but I just can't think of one.
The Wiktionary mentions 3 usages:
1/ (idiomatic) To give evidence regarding something; to attest for.
2006 Staff of Vault, The College Buzz Book, page 176:
This definitely speaks to the fact that at Georgetown, beginning at the admissions process, you're not a number but a real person.
2/ (idiomatic) To address a particular topic.
1981, McGill journal of education
Education for being speaks to what grows within the person himself
3/ (idiomatic) To resonate with, to strike a chord in.
His music really speaks to me.
All three usages don't seem particularly new.