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A Rose by any other Name...


Shakespeare and "Political Correctness"

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What's in a name? Or a word? Some words have many meanings, others can be used with different values attached to
them. But as Shakespeare pointed out, changing the word you use does not change the object or idea that it refers to.

When it comes to words and meanings, no-one has mastered the English language better than William Shakespeare. Although old Bill
died over 400 years ago, he knew what he was talking about. Hundreds of his words of wisdom have become proverbs in their own
right. Simple expressions, very often, like these two lines from Romeo and Juliet:
What's in a name? That which we call a rose
By any other name would smell as sweet.
But did the Bard get it all wrong? Was he really just unwittingly consolidating an ideology, expressing the domination of DWEM's
(Dead, White, European Males) over language and culture?
In the name of "political correctness", some have said so – and in doing so, have provoked the anger of others who do not share
their views. In recent years, particularly in the USA, the spread of political correctness has been denounced as an attack on free
speech.
The idea behind "P.C." is that some words offend people, and should be avoided. While avoiding offensive vocabulary is, in itself, is
an excellent principle, the excesses it has led to, notably on university
campuses, have been counterproductive, bringing the whole idea into
derision. A lot of people – not just political conservatives – fear that political
correctness on campuses, in the media, and in intellectual circles is a serious
threat to freedom of thought.
Opponents of P.C. claim that it defies the First Amend­ment to the Ameri­-
can Con­stitution, guaran­teeing free­dom of speech and ideas. For example, a
leading Cali­fornia newspaper was rebuked for restricting free speech, when it
circulated a list of "unacceptable" vocabu­lary to journalists. In an absurd case
in New York, a famous English brass band was asked to change its name
before playing in a concert. Concert organisers said that the name
Blackdykes Brass Band could offend, because in Ameri­can slang "black
dykes" could mean "Afro-American lesbians". Blackdykes in this case is
really the name of a mining village in the North of England, where the band
comes from. Black refers to the coal-coloured earth, and dyke is an old
English word meaning ditch or barrier, like dijk in Dutch or digue in French !
One wonders what would happen if an American museum advertised an
exhibition of paintings by the great Anglo Flemish artist Van Dyke, whose
works hang in the world's top art galleries, including New York, Chicago and
the National Gallery in Washington ! Now a van is a van, and a dyke is a .....
?
Originally, a "P.C." speaker was just someone who avoided using offensive, discriminating or sexist language; words like
chairman were replaced by neutral terms like chair or chair­person, words which are now well accepted in the English language. But
when or­dinary words such as deaf were outlawed (aurally chal­leged was invented as a eu­phemism), many people agreed that things
had gone too far! Though "deaf" and "dumb" can be used as abuse when refering to someone who can hear and speak normally...
(Well Homer Simpson is called the dumbest man on the planet, but he can speak, sort of) they have no insulting overtones when
refering to a person who cannot do so; calling someone aurally challenged in no way reduces his handicap; on the contrary, as a
longer expression than deaf, it draws attention to the disability and may sound deliberately facetious.
Political correctness is not just an American phenomenon; there was a case where (according to some newspapers) a headteacher
in Lon­don caused a scandal by refusing to take her pupils to see Romeo and Juliet, because, she claimed, it was too openly
heterosexual, (and thus dis­criminated against homosexuals and les­bians). Maybe she also disagreed with the line about the rose......
And talking of Shakespeare again .... 200 years ago a famous En­glishman called Thomas Bowdler rewrote Shake­speare's works,
chang­ing all the vo­cabulary which he consid­ered could not "with propriety be read aloud in a family". No offensive words, no
embracing, no de­bauchery. Bowdler gave his name to a new word in the English lan­guage: to bowdlerize.
No-one today (and least of all a pro­gressive intel­lectual) would dream of recom­mending the bowdlerized version of Shake­speare;
yet in his way, Bowdler was only be­ing politically correct, by the standards of his time.

► More on Shakespeare : Shakespeare 400 years on

WORDS

Bard: poet - unwittingly: without realising it - be counterproductive: produce a result which is the opposite of the result desired -
derision: ridicule - defy: go against - brass band: musical ensemble with trumpets, trombones etc. - euphemism: an inoffensive
alternative - facetious: mocking, satirical - overtone: meanings - propriety: modesty -

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WORKSHEET

A rose by any other name..

For teachers:

Discussion: what do your students think of "political correctness". What does the writer think of it? What points in the article allow us
to gauge the writer's viewpoint?

Word formation:
Take the word correctness. The root word is correct. Have stu­dents pick out all the other nouns in this text that are derived from
adjectives or verbs; there are plenty! What other words belong to each "family" of words? Derived nouns in the text include:
meaning / wisdom / expression / superiority / anger / attack / excess / derision / conservative / freedom / thought / amend­ment /
constitution / organiser / expression / disability / propriety / embracing / debauchery /

Other language points:


What's in a name? That which we call a rose, By any other name would smell as sweet.
Note the expression that which, which in modern English would normally be replaced by what, as in What we call a rose.....
Unwittingly : an interesting word, as it is one of the rare surviving words in Modern English that is derived from the old English verb
witan, meaning to know (like the German verb wissen). We find it also in the nouns a halfwit or a dimwit... but these are not very PC.
The adjective witty is also related, but the meaning has changed.
Aurally challenged : note the spelling of aurally, which means pertaining to the ear. It is not a synonym of orally, meaning from the
mouth. The expression Oral comprehension, commonly used in language classes, is a misnomer, as it is really a student's ability to
understand by hearing that is being referred to. Strictly speaking, "oral" comprehension would be an ability to lip read ! We use the
expression as if it meant understanding the production of someone else's mouth.

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