There was a book review in The Wall Street Journal not too terribly long ago about "amerikan" accents and why we speak the way we speak. Why do some Bostonians, for instance, drop "Rs"? Why do some southerners say "y'all"?
You can read the review here, (if you can still read.) These few sentences, however, were the ones that sent me scrambling to my old Smith-Corona to write this post. (12 wpm when I'm typing downhill.) In them, I noticed a point-counterpoint in modren amerikkka.
I began seeing what I would consider a phenomenon--or a "potent new dynamic" back more than a decade-and-a-half ago when I worked for the self-anointed "digital agency of the decade," or the "agency for the digital age."
Certain words would sweep the agency like the Black Death galloped through 14th Century Europe. Suddenly, everything was "curated." Suddenly, we were no longer in advertising, we were "brand story-tellers." Suddenly we no longer told people what a product of service did and why they needed it, we were instead, "having conversations about brands."
Even our posture changed. Suddenly, we were "leaning in." We weren't expressing opinions or thoughts anymore, we were finding "insights." The list goes on and on and continues to this day.
Google Ngram is a blunt-instrument of a tool and not very often updated but it often serves my purpose. It measures the prevalence of a word or term within a corpus of texts with a defined date range. A few examples follow:
I asked myself at the time what I think is the question we have to ask ourselves more often. "I've gone my entire life without hearing about "curation" or "story-telling" or "marbling in steak." I'm not a young man and these things which I seem to hear 50-100 times a day are all things I never heard before.
What's happened that this is happening?
What does this mean?
If you've read Victor Klemperer, author of "The Language of the Third Reich," or even have a smattering of knowledge of George Orwell, you'd realized that language often has a political agenda. Simply put, it's used to sell something: an idea, a product, a person or a cult. [By the way, for $23, including shipping, you can buy this book. You'll be glad you did.]
When all of a sudden you hear dozens of times a day, or more, something that you've never heard before, it's your responsibility, if you're a thoughtful human being, to pay attention to how you might possibly be being manipulated.
Looking at the paper and the "comedy/tragedy" "news"-shows of late, I realized another one of these charged words. (By "charged," I mean words we'll eventually be charged for and wind-up paying for something that will make someone else rich.)
I am 68-years old, almost 68.5.
I realized the only time I ever heard the word "ballroom" was when I watched the Disney movie Cinderella with my daughters.
Now ballroom (a synonym for 'architectural scrotum') seems to be every third word you hear from the plutocrats and malefactors of great wealth who are reverse robin-hooding the entire world. That is stealing from the poor and giving to the rich.
Personally, I couldn't give a rat's ass about the architectural scrotum tump will foist on the nation. But I do care about how an entire nation is being force-fed a spurious idea to enrich someone else--either through money or ego.
You have to wonder why this is so important.
You have to wonder what is really happening.
You have to wonder what bill of goods we're being sold.
Language, despite how it's so often mis-used, does not lie. That's a quote from Dr. Klemperer. How we use language, how we speak, how the brands and corporate hegemons we work for speak has within the meaning of the words a larger meaning, perhaps one that's harder to veil.
Responsible people question.
They don't accept words--they examine them.
They reveal actions.
That's what we should all be doing.