Unkind words : ethnic labeling from Redskin to WASP
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Unkind words : ethnic labeling from Redskin to WASP
Bergin & Garvey : Distributed to the trade by National Book Network, 1990
- : pbk
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Note
Bibliography: p. [123]-129
Includes indexes
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
ISBN 9780897892179
Description
In this extensive study of ethnic labeling in the United States' popular speech and usage, Irving Lewis Allen explores the major traditional themes behind the making of ethnic slurs. Viewing U.S. slang as a reflection of social diversity, rapid change, and the complexity of U.S. society, Allen puts forth a special insight into the social workings of American culture, both past and present. The book offers an overview of the major traditional themes used in the development of ethnic slurs as well as the most recent fads of covert and devious slurring with codewords and various kinds of sly word games. Unkind Words delivers its message with unusual clarity, that too often shoddy language shapes our thinking about the politics of ethnicity.
Divided into two parts, the book begins with a detailed study of the older and more traditional slurs in American vernacular. These words the author terms fighting words, which, when dropped, often raised fists in schoolyards and barrooms. The book uncovers the origins of these slurs--few are heard in today's public discourse--and places them in a word museum where the reader can view the foolish viciousness of a cultural past. In one chapter, the author singles out the derogatory labels that have been applied specifically to women and reveals slurs that originate in both gender and ethnic conflict. The second part of the book focuses on labels that have appeared in the last few decades, often more genteel and less confrontational. While more subtle than their forerunners, these words often serve the same old psychological and social needs to stereotype and express hostility. Anyone interested in ethnic identity in the United States, in the workings of a plural society, or the origins and uses of American ethnic slurs, will find Unkind Words fascinating reading.
Table of Contents
Preface
Traditional Slurs
Ethnic Slurs in Historical American Slang
Six Types of Slurs and Their Themes
Two Hundred Personal Names that Became Epithets
Men . . . and One Hundred Epithets for Ethnic Women
You Are What You Eat: Dietary Stereotypes
Flippity Floppity: The Semantic Inversion and Trans-migration of Slurs
Newer Devices
Sly Slurs: Mispronunciation and Decapitalization of Group Names
Sly Slurs: Euphemisms and Codewords
Acrimonious Acronyms
Ding Dong, the Wicked WASP is Dead
Appendix: Good Reading on Bad Words
Index of Slur-Names
Author-Subject Index
- Volume
-
: pbk ISBN 9780897892209
Description
In this extensive study of ethnic labeling in the United States' popular speech and usage, Irving Lewis Allen explores the major traditional themes behind the making of ethnic slurs. Viewing U.S. slang as a reflection of social diversity, rapid change, and the complexity of U.S. society, Allen puts forth a special insight into the social workings of American culture, both past and present. The book offers an overview of the major traditional themes used in the development of ethnic slurs as well as the most recent fads of covert and devious slurring with codewords and various kinds of sly word games. Unkind Words delivers its message with unusual clarity, that too often shoddy language shapes our thinking about the politics of ethnicity.
Divided into two parts, the book begins with a detailed study of the older and more traditional slurs in American vernacular. These words the author terms fighting words, which, when dropped, often raised fists in schoolyards and barrooms. The book uncovers the origins of these slurs--few are heard in today's public discourse--and places them in a word museum where the reader can view the foolish viciousness of a cultural past. In one chapter, the author singles out the derogatory labels that have been applied specifically to women and reveals slurs that originate in both gender and ethnic conflict. The second part of the book focuses on labels that have appeared in the last few decades, often more genteel and less confrontational. While more subtle than their forerunners, these words often serve the same old psychological and social needs to stereotype and express hostility. Anyone interested in ethnic identity in the United States, in the workings of a plural society, or the origins and uses of American ethnic slurs, will find Unkind Words fascinating reading.
Table of Contents
Preface Traditional Slurs Ethnic Slurs in Historical American Slang Six Types of Slurs and Their Themes Two Hundred Personal Names that Became Epithets Men ... and One Hundred Epithets for Ethnic Women You Are What You Eat: Dietary Stereotypes Flippity Floppity: The Semantic Inversion and Trans-migration of Slurs Newer Devices Sly Slurs: Mispronunciation and Decapitalization of Group Names Sly Slurs: Euphemisms and Codewords Acrimonious Acronyms Ding Dong, the Wicked WASP is Dead Appendix: Good Reading on Bad Words Index of Slur-Names Author-Subject Index
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