I've been thinking about this for a while and the untimely demise of George Carlin seems as good an occasion as any to pick this up again.
For as long as I can remember I've been fascinated with language. Just the sheer awesomeness and variety of it. Language and speech are such wonderful and varied tools of communication. The innumerable ways language can be used, celebrated, and manipulated just boggle the mind...
The obsession got worse once I decided to be a linguistics major...Well, and the fascination shows no signs of decreasing any time soon.
I love books, magazines, newspapers, blogs. I appreciate tricky crossword puzzles, wordplay, a clever comeback, memorable quotes.
You get the picture. I should probably write about language more often, just because the subject is so extensive and fascinating, it makes my head hurt. It feels like my thoughts on language are very crowded and unstructured in my mind. Maybe writing some of them down would help untangle the weird web of words.
(Yes, I appreciate alliterations, too. Ha!)
So swearing:
I vaguely remember writing a term paper on swearing and taboo words years ago. Of course, the paper is nowhere to be found. I think it was on the relative 'offensiveness' of certain swearwords. Some are absolute no-gos. Others are probably acceptable. It all depends on context and audience. Hmm. Good place to post this:
(I don't like the collage-video, but the audio portion is great.)
Well, what's my point? I love swearing. I think it adds color and expression to statements. There are not many things more satisfying than a passionate rant littered with swearwords. To me, at least.
Also, from a purely scientific standpoint, no word or expression can be 'bad' or 'unacceptable'. It's all society and associations superimposed on the language...
Of course, language and communication are always 'in context'. So I cannot ignore the fact that there are other people listening and evaluating what I say; people judging me on the way I choose to express myself.
Which brings me to the dilemma: Is swearing a flawed way of communicating after all? Is the frequent use of cuss-words a sign of mediocre language skills? A sign of laziness? Crudeness? Vulgarity? Lack of taste?
I think it could be in some cases. It could be a sign of subpar linguistic expression if you can't reign your swearing in. If you use the same set of words and phrases with everybody; be it your boss, a judge or your brother. The beauty of language is that it's so diverse. Language can be beautiful or coarse, direct or indirect, delicate or sturdy.
That said, I want to be able to use the whole array of words. To forgo all swearing would be censoring myself and it would cut out a significant chunk of the communication tools at my disposal.
Sometimes I want to swear. Loudly. Or mutter a curse under my breath.
So to sum this up:
Fuck, yes. It's an art.
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4 comments:
I have no problem with swearing. I've incorporated most curses into my everyday vernacular simply from growing up hearing them all around me. I think at times it can certainly show a lack of effort, if not intelligence, but often it helps just drive home whatever point you're trying to make.
That said, there are certain places where I naturally will curtail my swearing. At work, around family...that's about it.
WAAAAHAHAHAHA Lady, I think you should make your last line a mantra of sorts. :-)
dies ist ein test von lulu und bins. schöne grüße von zuhause.
Tschau Blödi
free associating, musically:
Track 1 at
http://hindsight2020.muxtape.com/
later -- m-ich-i
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