Friday, July 24, 2020
Words of the Week! Four Summertime Blues Richmond Writing
Words of the Week! Four Summertime Blues Richmond Writing Blue is not a feeling we associate with summer, whatever our teenage experiences while listening to The Whos song Summertime Blues. I began thinking about the many figures of speech, as well as single words, we couple with the adjective blue. All of the four really are metaphors, except for one literal use of the term blue nose. Read on. The other day, a friend referred to a well read friend as a blue stocking. The Cambridge English Dictionary calls such a person an intelligent and well-educated woman who spends most of her time studying and is therefore not approved of by some men. Wikipedia and the OED Online deepen the story, adding a history of an 18th Century literary society called The Blue Stockings. Elizabeth Montagu, literary critic, social reformer and author, started and led the group. It was a difficult time for women who wished to pursue intellectual activities, formally, with no access to higher education. Today the usage of blue stocking is rare; Id not heard of it before my friend uttered the phrase. Its not obsolete, with a currency of four of eight at the OED. Their entry also records a 2001 usage in Vogue that I just love: Miuccia Prada has..embraced the Waspy,..book-editor look of yore and taken bluestocking style to silk-stocking heights. Thankfully, rarity (2 of 8 in the OEDs usage frequency) marks our next word, bluebeard, also about women. This, however, has nothing to do with a group of learned ladies but a fiend who marries again and again, only to kill his wives. The OED entry reminds of of Henry VIIIs bluebeard life. It can be used as adjective as well, as in a bluebeard room where someone hides something, presumably something grisly. A recent bluebeard from cinema is Robert Mitchums character from the excellent (and only) film directed by Charles Laughton, Night of the Hunter. The original Bluebeard (capitalized) came from a French folk tale first published in 1697. That should make us shiver, even on a warm summer day! Bluebeards can apparently be seducers who abandon their lovers, one after another. The verb to bluebeard appears, but seems rare. Are you a blue blood? That is a term I did hear as a child, from better educated peers who talked about the rich families who lived (literally) across the railroad tracks from our neighborhood of modest row-houses. They were the grandees, those to the manner born, the would-be aristocrats of our odd little Southern city. As the gentry, they put on airs. What why blue blood? The OED cites an etymology from the Spanish sangre azul, for the fair complexion of the well-to-do; you can see those veins beneath their milky skin. I prefer skin seasoned by life outdoors. One thinks here of Goyas bizarre and unflattering portrait of Spanish nobility. This term is one Ive long used, so the frequency (3 of 8) at the OED surprised me. And finally, we have Bluenose, my favorite of these words (usage frequency is also a 3 of 8 at the OED). As a teen, I loved cartoons that made fun of Puritans. Often they were drawn with blue noses and scowls, making me think them eternally ill in the New England climate. Thats partly true; the OED notes that residents of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick were called Bluenoses for the cold there. It can also be a type of sailing vessel. In this sense, unlike bluebeard or blue blood it gets capitalized. Usages appear as blue-nose, blue nose, and bluenose. Usually the days, the term refers to prudes and puritanical busy-bodies. I am anything but, with my heroes being Beatniks, not busybodies, so I enjoy yanking their choir robes. I ran across the a bluenose recently in a comment on a piece Id written about a barn find car for Hemmings Motor News Daily; Id made an offhand drug reference in relation to the cars of the early 1970s, and a puritanical reader vehemently objected. In my defense, another reader said that the comments section always brought out the bluenoses. I loved that banter, but writers need skins as thick as auto sheet-metal, and we have to bear the dents made by many a bluenose reader. A cousin of bluenose is blue law. Theres a false etymology that these prudish laws, aimed at curbing sales of certain products or prohibiting certain work on Sunday, came from their origin when printed on blue paper. Snopes notes that the real origin is their relation to the bluenoses who enacted them. Have a word or metaphor worth pondering? This blog will continue all summer. Please nominate a word or metaphor useful in academic writing by e-mailing me (jessid -at- richmond -dot- edu) or leaving a comment below. See all of our Metaphors of the Month here and Words of the Week here. Images by Thomas Rowlandson, Breaking Up of the Blue Stocking Club, and Francisco de Goya, Charles IV of Spain and his family, courtesy of Wikipedia Commons.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.