1 / 32

The Story of American

The Story of American. By Alan DeSantis. Fun But True:.

saeran
Download Presentation

The Story of American

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Story of American By Alan DeSantis

  2. Fun But True: • Aoccdrnig to a rscheearch at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it deosn't mttaer in waht oredr the ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoetnt tihng is taht the frist and lsat ltteer be at the rghit pclae. The rset can be a total mses and you can sitll raed it wouthit porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe. • Fcuknig amzanig huh?

  3. Part One:American Language—A Case Study in Unity and Diversity

  4. Immigration: Wave 1 • During America’s first 200 years, the culture and its language was shaped by many different ethnicities • A) German, English, Irish, Scottish, Swedish, Spanish (Mexico, Florida), French (Canada & Louisiana) • B) In addition, there were over 500 different Native American tribes • C) There were also millions of African Slaves with their native languages

  5. Immigration: Wave 2 • As America matured, more and more wanted to be part of this great experiment • 1) Total immigration 1607-1840 was no more than one million. • Until 1840, America received only 20,00 immigrants a year (from Africa and Britain) • 2) Then, 1845 to 1900, 30 million poured into the country. • 3) 1901-1905, America absorbed: 1 mill Italians, 1 mill Austrian-Hungarians, 1/2 Mill Russians, and so on . . . • At the turn of the century, NYC had more Germans than anywhere but Berlin; Irish than anywhere but Dublin; Russians than in Kiev; Italians than in Malian or Naples

  6. Immigration: Wave 3 • Today, we still have millions coming . . . • South-East Asia: Korea, Vietnam, China, etc. • South & Central America: Mexico, Guatemala, Columbia, etc. • Caribbean: Cuba, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, etc. • Africa: Nigeria, Ethiopia, Egypt, etc. • Eastern Europe: Russia, East Germany, Romania, etc.

  7. The Fear of Contamination • Through it all (from the 1600 to 2000) we have feared the impact of diverse cultures on American society • We are worried about the “purity” of American culture & language • Forgetting, of course, that there is nothing pure about American or our language • We are mongrels, through & through

  8. Our Two Great Fears: • 1) Jefferson and Noah Webster both thought American would become separate from English • Like English evolved away from German • 2) Franklin thought that America would fragment into a number of speech communities like Europe • One country speaking English, another speaking Irish, and another speaking German • This is not unlike the fear we have today about South Florida (Cuban), California (Asian), and Texas (Mexican) • Neither of these happened. Why?

  9. Why American Has Worked • There are at least 6 reasons why we have not splintered into many fragmented cultures • 1) People moved back and forth throughout the country quite often and rapidly • Thanks to mass transportation & open state boarders

  10. Why American Has Worked • 2) Intermingling of people from diverse backgrounds—everybody married everybody • My Italian Grandfather married my Jewish Grandmother / Dad’s Irish best friend • 3) Social pressures to conform. Not to “blend in” meant you were dirty, poor, stupid • You were a wop (gwapo—strutting and cocky), Kraut (from the food); Yid (for Yiddish), Dago (for the Spanish deago); Mc and Patties (from names of Irish) • Only with future generations do we want to re-connect with our old cultures (Tullio vs. me)

  11. Why American Has Worked • 4) The desire for a common national identity • We all have a need for social identity • Perhaps it is hard wired in us (social creatures) • Being part of a group simply feels better to us • America allowed us to take part in the “dream” and make it ours • Unlike old Monarchies

  12. Why American Has Worked • 5) The mass media • “Our common story teller” • By the 1920’s, we were all glued to the radio • By the 1950’s, we were hooked on the TV • Today, every youth in America knows MTV’s “top 20”—and the culture of sex, violence, and consumption it represents • 6) The desire for financial/materialistic success • To “make it rich” in America means you have to assimilate into main-stream society

  13. Why American Has Worked • Within one generation, most Americans could not speak their parent’s language • This trend continues even today • With some exceptions where there was/is geographical isolation, almost all immigrants assimilate • Cajuns from Louisiana • Gualala from the Islands off of NC

  14. Part Two:Influences that Made American the Largest & Most Interesting Language in the World

  15. Making American out of English • Just as English was shaped by the Celts, Christians, French, Romans, Vikings, and the Anglos & Saxons. . . • American was (and is) also shaped by 1) other cultures and 2) unique experiences • Thus, English and American are both: • New (compared to the rest of the world’s languages) • Mongrelized • Constantly evolving • Very large (because of it willingness to grow and borrow) • Let’s see some of these influences . . .

  16. “American” Influences • Early Americans • Spain • They not only gave us horses, cows, & cowboys (so American) • Barbecue, chocolate, tomato, marijuana, plaza, stampede, tornado  • France • Toboggans, caribous, bayou, crevasse, levee, depot, cents, dimes, cache, jambalaya, gopher, chowder, peak • Dutch(in New York) • Waffle, coleslaw, cookie, landscape, caboose, boss, snooping, spook, Yankee, poppycock, snoop, dope (drugs), Santa Claus • African Slaves • Banjo, voodoo, jazz, gumbo, jitter, cola, yam, zombie

  17. “American” Influences • Place Names: • England: Boston, Greenwich, Cambridge, Oxford, London (all old towns), Charlestown, Jamestown, Maryland & Carolina (after Royals) • Native Americans: 26 of the 50 state names: Connecticut, Kentucky, Minnesota, Oregon, Kansas, Dakotas, Massachusetts, & most rivers and streams • World History:Troy, Utica, Athens, Paris, Corinth, Memphis, Sparta, Cicero, Cairo, Versailles, Rome, Cincinnati • French:Michigan, Illinois, Louisiana, Detroit, Baton Rouge, St. Louis, Des Moines • Spanish: Florida, Santa Fe, San Antonio, Los Angeles, Appalachians • Famous People: Washington (a state, the nation’s capital, 31 counties, and 120 towns), Lincoln (2nd most popular), & Clay (towns in 18 states).

  18. “American” Influences • Place Names: • The Funniest: Toad Suck, Idiotville, Boring, Chucklehead Diggings, Git up and Git, Dead Mule, One Eye, Puke, Shitbritches Creek, Whiskey Dick Mountain, Dead Bastard Peak, Two Tits, Shit-House Mountain, Fucking Creek, Tickle Cunt Branch, Coldass Creek, Pee Pee, Two Eggs, Ding Dong, Hot Coffee, & Blue Balls, PA (right next to Intercourse) • Names That Sound Indian: Indiana, Wyoming, Oklahoma & Idaho (the latter two were coined by congress because they thought it sounded like good Indian) • The Best of KY: Sugar Tit, Rabbit Hash, Bug, O.K., and 88 (find info in mother tongue)

  19. “American” Influences • Ben Franklin: • Presidential, bamboozle, colonization, advocate, bookstore • Frontier (in a new and rough land): • Bluff, notch, gap, divide, and clearing took new meaning • Hickory, live oak, sweet potato, eggplant, squash, bullfrog, groundhog, garter snake, Backwoodsman, squatter, prairie, clapboard, popcorn bobsled, sleigh • Lewis & Clark: 178 plants and 122 animal names, including grizzly bear, Yellowstone, great plains, prairie dog • Native Americas: • Wigwam, hickory, pecan, chipmunk, moose, terrapin, totem, papoose, squaw, moccasin, tomahawk, igloo, kayak, Pow-wow • Sayings: smoking a pipe of peace, war paint, fire water, Indian summer, playing possum, bury the hatchet, go on the warpath

  20. “American” Influences • Cowboy (Spanish): • Stampede, desperado, ranch, coral, rodeo, bronco, lasso, chaps, bandit, vamoose, gringo (meaning Greek) • Cowboy (American): • lollapalooza,, discombobulate, hornswagal, bite the dust, hot under the collar, tight ($), cowboy, punch, hand (for helper), pardner, jeans • Expressions: He is a Maverick (a man who did not brand his horses), real McCoy

  21. “American” Influences • 19th & 20th Century Immigration: • Italians—pizza, lasagna, espresso, minestrone, parmesan, pasta, tortellini, macaroni, ravioli, broccoli, zucchini • Germans—Westinghouse, Heinz, Budweiser, don’t be fresh, dumb, cookbook, bum, cylinder, kindergarten, ouch, scram, and how, hold on, deli, ouch, ecology, fresh, hoodlum, nix, phony, scram, will do, let it be • Jewish/Yiddish—chutzpah, smaltsy, hole in the head, who needs it, enough already, schmooze, nosh, schlep, kibitz, mensch, if you’ll excuse the expression, I need it like a hole in the head • Irish—The largest group gave us virtually nothing (like their Celtic ancestors) hooligan, speakeasy, slew • Japanese—kamikaze, karate, judo, ninja, sushi, tycoon, tsunami, karaoke

  22. “American” Influences • Gold Rush (1840s): • Gold mine (for good thing), pay dirt, panning for gold, panning out, strike it rich • America’s Capitalism (1850-1950): • Time is money, self-made man, well-to-do, money bag, tycoon, manufactories, millionaires, slum, sweatshop, tenement, skyscraper, get on the ground floor, sitting pretty, on easy street), dead broke, flat broke, sound as a dollar, & terms for money (beans, dough, c-note, buck, sawbuck) • Harlem (1910-30): • Jazz (again), jam session, jive talk, beat, groovy, too much, hip, send me, solid, chick

  23. Trademarked Names Singer Hoover (England) TV Dinners (for all frozen meals) Xerox Coke (South) Kleenex Jell-O Q-Tips Un-trademarked names Many lost in legal battles *thermos *cellophane *shredded wheat *zipper *bubble gum *aspirin *escalator *yo-yo *At one time, all these were capitalized and worth a fortune Corporate Brand (that have become synonymous with the item)

  24. But what about our expressions?

  25. Golf Par for the course Boxing Throwing in the towel Taking one on the chin Hitting below the belt Horse Racing Home stretch By a nose Playing the Field Dead Heat Neck and Neck Jockeying for Position Basketball Slam Dunk Nothing But Net Football Blindside Cheap shot Game plan Punt Quarterback Superbowl Fumble Drop the ball Hunting In my sights Blow your load Shooting blanks America’s Expressions: Sports (used by men & corp. America)

  26. America’s Expressions: Baseball (used by men & corp. America) • Strike 3 (blow it) • Homerun (to succeed) • You're out of here (to leave) • Let’s play ball (to start a deal) • Keep you head in the game (stay focused) • Keep you eye on the ball (stay focused) • Throwing a curve ball (an unseen trick) • Out in left field (a bit crazy) • Off the wall (a bit crazy) • Hard Ball (serious business) • Swinging for the fences (attempting something bold) • And of course, the “bases” metaphor in making out • Where you can “strike out”

  27. Behind enemy lines Bombard Break ranks Land minds Booby trap Attack (food, women, etc) Surrender (give up) Dodging a bullet Don’t give up the ship Dog fight Shell shock Blockbuster Type of bomb Ground zero Fall out Grunt No-man’s land Going over the top Digging in Dud America’s Expressions: War(used by men & corp. America)

  28. War Metaphors in Football • “Football is played on a gridiron, in a stadium, sometimes called Soldier Field or War Memorial Stadium. In football the object is for the quarterback, also known as the field general, to be on target with his aerial assault, riddling the defense by hitting his receivers with deadly accuracy in spite of the blitz, even if he has to use shotgun. With short bullet passes and long bombs, he marches his troops into enemy territory, balancing this aerial assault with a sustained ground attack that punches holes in the forward wall of the enemy's defensive line.” • George Carlin

  29. Crap shoot To follow suit Hit the jackpot Just for openers To stand pat You bet your life You bet I do Deal me out I’ll pass Bet your bottom $ Fold (quit) High roller Pass the buck The knife, not $ Fair, big, & raw deal Stack the deck Deal from the bottom Poker face Call the bluff Ante-up Up and ante Blue chip Cashing in your chips String along America’s Expressions: Gambling

  30. All fired up Getting up a head of steam In the clear Back tracking Side tracked Rite of way Stream lining Gravy train Main lining Drug use Make the grade Reaching the end of the line One track mind America’s Expressions: Railroad

  31. Conclusion

  32. The Never-Ending Story • At the turn of the century, words were being added to American dictionaries at a rate of 1,000 per year • Today, according to NYT, the rate has increased from 15,000 to 20,000 per year • The newest Random House Dictionary, second edition (1987), included 50,000 new words that did not exist only 21 years earlier • Including: preppy, quark, flextime, chairperson, sunblocker, pina colada, sushi, crepes and the names of 800 other new foods • Of its 315,000 entries, 210,000 had to be revised

More Related