OMG i am totes ova this whole blog thingy. it is sooo
annoying 2 hav 2 do 1 every week, & i just cant be fucked anymore :/
While there may be a tiny shred of truth in the above
comment (It can get tenuous, but it is actually rather refreshing compared to the
endless stream of essays for my other subjects), it is utterly inappropriate to
mention in this blog. Talking in such a vulgar, informal way is not suitable
for the particular genre of these blogs. Text talk, which was established in
the CMC movement of last week, would be only be acceptable in backstage sites like
facebook, and the extreme misuse of grammar will hopefully only be found in
primary school children. Also, use of profanities such as “fuck” is certainly
not appropriate for frontstage academic writings.
This demonstrates that there is a time and place for
expletives, epithets, profanity and ‘rudeness’. Since we have socially
constructed meaning to certain words with symbolic interactionism, we can’t
just blurt out any word we want in any situation, for fear of a social death.
The metaphor Andy uses (which I think is awesome) is Harry Potter spells. These
words actually mean something more than a syntactic organisation of letters.
While not to the extent of magical side effects, words today still mean
something depending on the context they are put in based on social
interpretations.
An interesting point about this topic is that words or
phrases can have complete opposite meanings between backstage and frontstage.
For instance, swearing in a frontstage setting can lead to alienation and only
politeness is accepted. On the other hand, politeness in a backstage setting
can actually create distance, while swearing can break the ice and create a more
equal relationship (i.e. swearing around ‘mates’).
snoot snoot
ReplyDeletehey I've found your blog to be really interesting the whole way through, we sort of talked about phrases having the opposite meanings when you're with your friends but you've sorted it into sociological terms. With your idea that politeness to your friends can create a distance, i really agree and would you agree in saying the swearing seems like a way that friends can form their own identities with each other and distance themselves from every day social life.
ReplyDeleteAll sociological theories should be explained using Harry Potter.
ReplyDelete