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Our sensitivity about 'curse' words has changed with the times
Deseret News ^ | Saturday, September 6, 2003 | Elaine Jarvik

Posted on 09/06/2003 7:20:53 AM PDT by ChemistCat

Pardon our French, as people used to say back in the days when they didn't use the following words quite so often, but we're going to now talk about the phrases "pissed off" and "that sucks." Are these dirty words? Or just words? And what about those other words, the ones that are still taboo enough to require dashes or abbreviations in newspapers such as this one? The s-word. The f-word. The f-word used as the all-purpose adjective. High-school teachers will tell you the halls are full of these words. As for "pissed off" — students say it so often "they're unaware they even say it," Highland High chemistry teacher Monica French says. Expletives made headlines last month when the Grove Theater in Pleasant Grove canceled its production of Neil Simon's "Rumors" after the playwright refused to let the theater delete language it thought its audience would find offensive — "a lot of G-D and Jesus Christs," explains theater co-owner Gayliene Omary, plus "the f-word used very casually." Acoustically speaking, words are just a series of hisses, pops and clicks. " 'Bad' words only have an effect if people think they're bad," says Marianna Di Paolo, chairwoman of the University of Utah Department of Linguistics. "Words are harmful if a culture regards them as harmful. Words become taboo because the culture associates taboo things with them. In Victorian times, the word "leg" was considered risque, Di Paolo explains. At the dinner table, it wasn't acceptable to ask for a leg or a thigh of chicken, which is why people started using the term "dark meat." (People also put skirts on tables and beds, so the furniture legs wouldn't show.) Within our own cultural memory, the word "pregnant" was forbidden on "I Love Lucy" in the early 1950s. Our sensitivity about words changes over time. Linguists call that "cognitive dialectology," says Rodolfo Celis, a linguist at Arcadia University. A word like "pissed" or "sucks," for example, might be considered crass and therefore inappropriate in "polite company." Then it starts seeping into more general usage, until finally there's a tipping point, Celis says, in which the word has become so mainstream that the people who still don't use it — often the older generation — start complaining that language has become coarser. Eventually, though, a word that once could get your mouth washed out with soap will be regarded as just a word. Does that mean we've become desensitized and crass? More desensitized but also less neurotic about bodily functions and sex? Have the words simply become sounds, devoid of any reference to something taboo? " 'Suck' is one that I am personally struggling with," says Celis, "as I perceive that it is shifting. When things are shifting there are some dangerous points of ambiguity." So recently, while teaching his freshman English composition class, in what he describes as "a lame attempt at inter-group affiliation," he said to his students: "I know some of these chapters kind of suck in the sense of exciting reading." The word sounded vulgar to his own ears, Celis admits. "But I genuinely think it is an almost neutral adjective for many freshmen."

Taboos evolve Playwright Neil Simon's lawyer told Grove Theatre co-owner Gayliene Omary that "educated people" can handle the f-word, and that Utahns need to become desensitized. That got Omary thinking. "Maybe he's saying that educated people don't let these words have power. Maybe we give these words more power than they deserve." But Omary doesn't agree. If a person becomes desensitized to the f-word, she says, it means becoming desensitized to the disrespect she believes it embodies. Robert Thompson, professor of media and culture at Syracuse University, recently heard a young Presbyterian pastor use the word "crap" from the pulpit. Thompson guesses the pastor didn't realize that the word once referred exclusively to excrement. The media didn't teach Americans to swear, Thompson notes. But what "The Sopranos," Ozzy Osbourne and countless movies have done is "domesticate" words that once were limited to fenced-off areas of social discourse — behind the barn, in bars, on ships full of proverbial sailors. On Thompson's campus, walking across the quad, he'll hear students sprinkling the f-word throughout their conversations — which makes him wonder if, by the time these students are grandparents, the f-word will shock anyone at all. "It took centuries for the f-word to acquire the taboo that it holds; it'll take only a generation to completely wear it out," Thompson predicts. And then what? "We're wearing these things out very quickly, and you can't just make these things up. An entire culture has to agree that a word means something, that it has an aura and a gravitas, and that takes generations." Cuss words are not a renewable resource, he says. The good news is that "the only reason this stuff outrages anyone is because we've all agreed it deserves outrage," Thompson argues. The bad news, he says, is that a culture needs its curses. His theory is that the reason road rage has escalated is that the use of the middle finger as a non-verbal curse has become so casual. "It used to be so forbidden and taboo. So if you used it, you felt you'd gotten your revenge." Now, because it's lost some of its power, "you have to go elsewhere for revenge."

Violence rehearsal Salt Lake psychologist Lynn Johnson disagrees, seeing swearing not as an alternative to violence but a "rehearsal for real violence," a way of training the brain at being irritable and aggressive. As for vulgar language, "Can you imagine Mother Teresa saying, 'Hey, that really sucks, I am so pissed off,' "Johnson asks. Often it's not the words themselves, it's the tone in which the words are uttered that's damaging, to both the listener and the speaker, says Jim O'Connor of Lake Forest, Ill., who five years ago founded the Cuss Control Academy. O'Connor's list of reasons swearing "imposes a personal penalty" includes: "It makes you unpleasant to be with; it endangers your relationships; it's a tool for whiners and complainers, . . . it shows you don't have control." Swearing also represents the dumbing down of America, O'Connor says, and it lacks imagination. Despite his campaign, and hundreds of interviews on TV, radio and in print, O'Connor reports that America as a whole is swearing more than ever. On an individual basis, though, people tell him he's helped them clean up their acts. His own daughter, who once was "quite foul-mouthed," stopped swearing cold-turkey three years ago, at age 24. "She became a Mormon and stopped swearing," O'Connor says. "Most of the people I know who really stopped swearing, who stopped completely, did it because of religion." The Bible is clear in its admonition about taking the Lord's name in vain. As for vulgar language, preachers sometimes refer to passages such as Ephesians 4:29, translated in various versions as "let no unwholesome word proceed from your mouth" or "let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth." "Swearing is a venial sin, and a venial sin weakens charity," argues Dan John, director of religious education for the Catholic Diocese of Salt Lake City. Foul language "weakens the layers of community," he says. If no one is offended, "that's a sign that the bonds of community are being weakened. If you're not offended by offensive things, then we have a problem." Are there exceptions —for example, solitary swearing? "I'd hate to go to hell and find out I'm there on a stubbed-toe violation," John says.

Stub-toe swearing Stub-toe swearing comes from a different part of the brain than normal speech, scientists say. Washington University theoretical neurobiologist William H. Calvin, author of "A Brain for All Seasons," explains that "emphatic exclamations of all sorts seem to be coming from the supplementary motor area, in the midline of the brain above the corpus callosum. That's also true of many animal vocalizations." What Calvin calls "novel strings of words — our short and long sentences" are created in a different part of the brain. "People can have strokes that disrupt novel sorts of language (i.e. aphasia) while still being able to swear like sailors. It can be very distressing to their families." Calvin said he doesn't know if anyone has studied whether someone who tries to use faux swear words would utter the more forbidden f-word following a stroke, or whether "fetch" would still be satisfying enough.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: cussing; language; profanity; swearing
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Alex Nabaum, Deseret Morning News

Put me in the stubbed-toe-violation category. I'll be working on it!

My spouse claims that he doesn't think cr*p is or ever has been a bad word, but I bet he never used it around his grandma.
1 posted on 09/06/2003 7:20:54 AM PDT by ChemistCat
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To: ChemistCat
Profanity is the crutch of the conversational cripple.
2 posted on 09/06/2003 7:24:15 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: ChemistCat
Aren't they all really just words? Sticks and stones, etc....
3 posted on 09/06/2003 7:25:05 AM PDT by stuartcr
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To: stuartcr
It's all just so gay...
4 posted on 09/06/2003 7:30:10 AM PDT by Eagle Eye (There ought to be a law against excessive legislation.)
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To: Non-Sequitur
Profanity is the crutch of the conversational cripple.

Good one. I like that.

5 posted on 09/06/2003 7:30:23 AM PDT by Texas Mom
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To: stuartcr
I think some of the slangs are somewhat funny when they are strung into phrases. A friend was changing a tire yeterday. A State trooper had just gotten off shift at the barraks when he saw my friend and stopped to make sure he was all right.

A carload of kids went by, saw my friend and did not see the trooper, and shouted out, "Hey Dude! It must suck to be you!"

The trooper said, "If you have this under control, I think I shall take off, and give them a ration of crap, OK?"

Fellow came to Work laughing about it.

6 posted on 09/06/2003 7:33:23 AM PDT by Gorzaloon (Contents may have settled during shipping, but this tagline contains the stated product weight.)
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Comment #7 Removed by Moderator

To: Eagle Eye
It's all just so gay...

Yes.

8 posted on 09/06/2003 7:41:48 AM PDT by ppaul
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To: Nac Mac Feegle
I realized yesterday that I have been in Oklahoma long enough now that "yeah" has two syllables and "something" is pronounced "sumpin."

Oh, dear.
9 posted on 09/06/2003 7:41:57 AM PDT by ChemistCat (Focused, Relentless Charity Beats Random Acts of Kindness.)
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To: ChemistCat
I remember Dr. J. Vernon McGee saying crap on the radio. "And may I say to ya, that's a bunch on crap!
I don't find it offensive. It’s just like the words feces or excrement, IMO.
10 posted on 09/06/2003 7:45:19 AM PDT by Jonx6
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To: ChemistCat
But Omary doesn't agree. If a person becomes desensitized to the f-word, she says, it means becoming desensitized to the disrespect she believes it embodies.

Given the current rate of rape, STDs, and pregnancy...she may just have a point.

11 posted on 09/06/2003 7:46:48 AM PDT by joesnuffy (Moderate Islam Is For Dilettantes)
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To: ChemistCat
I realized yesterday that I have been in Oklahoma long enough now that "yeah" has two syllables and "something" is pronounced "sumpin."

Yeah, but are you fixin' to do sumpin?

12 posted on 09/06/2003 7:51:03 AM PDT by rond
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To: stuartcr
"Aren't they all really just words? Sticks and stones, etc...."

All words are not equal - words mean things. . .putting them on the typical equal playing field of Liberal life disempowers a language just as equal playing fields disempower individuals.

13 posted on 09/06/2003 7:54:59 AM PDT by cricket
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To: ChemistCat
Well, F*** the author of this column. She S***s. :-)
14 posted on 09/06/2003 7:58:04 AM PDT by El Gran Salseron
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To: Non-Sequitur
The topic and comments that I have so far read are symptoms of the decay of our language. Profanity takes the name in vain. Obscenity refers to bodily functions and 'I'll know it when I see it.' A vulgarity is merely 'common' speech. In every case offense, like beauty, lies in the eye of the beholder. In this day and age of hyperbolic speech, a good 'curse' cuts through a lot of PC bull shit.
15 posted on 09/06/2003 7:58:45 AM PDT by dhuffman@awod.com (The conspiracy of ignorance masquerades as common sense.)
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To: cricket
HOO rah! Bump to the top! Well said.
16 posted on 09/06/2003 8:00:11 AM PDT by dhuffman@awod.com (The conspiracy of ignorance masquerades as common sense.)
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To: cricket
As I understand it, when the Normans (French) conquered England, Anglo Saxon words were relegated to the vulgar. Ergo it is ok to use the word "intercourse" but not to use the "F word." Same for many other bodily and social functions.

When one mulls that over, it makes it more uncomfortable to accept some of the divisions between "proper" and not.
17 posted on 09/06/2003 8:04:34 AM PDT by marsh2
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To: ChemistCat
It's not just curse words, of course -- words of all types are constantly being "devalued" to the extent that new words must be invented to convey the original sense intended.

For example, awful once meant, and in fact is still defined in my dictionary (among other definitions) as filling one with terror or dread or worthy of solomn respect. Most contemporary use of the word, however, is in a much more trivial framework, as in "that was an awful cup of coffee."

Mary Poppins' word supercalifragilisticexpialidocious will probably soon mean not bad.

18 posted on 09/06/2003 8:04:58 AM PDT by southernnorthcarolina ("Yes, but other than that, Mrs. Lincoln, how did you enjoy the play?")
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To: ChemistCat
Casual vulgarity simply isn't pleasant, which, I think, is why people use it with such alarming frequency. To my mind it's like sitting down to a formal dinner and finding a dehydrated lump of dog feces on the table.
19 posted on 09/06/2003 8:05:44 AM PDT by Agnes Heep
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To: southernnorthcarolina
words of all types are constantly being "devalued" to the extent that new words must be invented to convey the original sense intended.

The word "Hero" is lost and there is no substitute. "Hero" has come to mean anyone we like, leaving no word for TRUE Heros. Thus, there is no ability in English to differentiate and discern.

This is true for many other words such as "Impact" and "Overview."

20 posted on 09/06/2003 8:09:43 AM PDT by freedumb2003 (Peace through Strength)
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