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Insult Information

An insult (also called a slur, scoff, slight or putdown) is an expression, statement (or sometimes behavior) which is considered degrading and offensive. Insults (sometimes called "cracks" "remarks" or one-liners)[1] may be intentional or accidental. An example of the latter is a well-intended simple explanation, which in fact is superfluous, but is given due to underestimating the intelligence or knowledge of the other.

Contents

Exchange

Lacan considered insults a primary form of social interaction, central to the imaginary order - 'a situation that is symbolised in the "Yah-boo, so are you" of the transitivist quarrel, the original form of aggressive communication'.[2]

Erving Goffman points out that every 'crack or remark set up the possibility of a counter-riposte, topper, or squelch, that is, a comeback'[3] He cites the example of possible interchanges at a dance in a school gym:

Sexual

'Verbal insults often take a phallic form. Almost all the really vicious swearwords we can use to hurl abuse at someone are sexual words...Visual insults follow the same trend'.[5]

Junior school often sees boys 'use sexual swear words and symbolic sexual gestures to unsettle and overtly intimidate girls'.[6]

Formal

The flyting was a formalized sequence of literary insults: 'invective or flyting, the literary equivalent of the spell-binding curse, uses similar incantatory devices for opposite reasons, as in Dunbar's Flyting with Kennedy '.[7]

'A little-known survival of the ancient "flytings," or contests-in-insults of the Anglo-Scottish bards, is the type of xenophobic humor once known as "water wit" in which passengers in small boats crossing the Thames...would insult each other grossly, in all the untouchable safety of being able to get away fast'.[8]

Samuel Johnson once triumphed in such an exchange: 'a fellow having attacked him with some coarse raillery, Johnson answered him thus, "Sir, your wife, under pretence of keeping a bawdy-house, is a receiver of stolen goods"'.[9]

Anatomies

Various typologies of insults have been proposed over the years. Desmond Morris, noting that 'almost any action can operate as an Insult Signal if it is performed out of its appropriate context - at the wrong time or in the wrong place' - classes such signals in ten 'basic categories: 1. Disinterest Signals...2. Boredom Signals...3. Impatience Signals...4. Superiority Signals...5. Deformed-compliment Signals...6. Mock-discomfort Signals...7. Rejection Signals....8. Mockery Signals...9. Symbolic Insults...10. Dirt Signals'.[10]

Elizabethans took great interest in such analyses, distinguishing out, for example, the 'fleering frump...when we give a mock with a scornful countenance as in some smiling sort looking aside or by drawing the lip awry, or shrinking up the nose'.[11] Shakespeare himself set up an insult-hierarchy of seven-fold 'degrees. The first, the Retort Courteous; the second, the Quip Modest; the third, the Reply Churlish; the fourth, the Reproof Valiant; the fifth, the Countercheck Quarrelsome; the sixth, the Lie with Circumstance; the seventh, the Lie Direct'.[12]

Legal

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Whether or not speech or behavior is insulting in practice, and sometimes by the terms of local assault statutes, is often a product of the subjective sense of the insulted party. However, insults to one person who might not mind such derogatory speech may indirectly insult others. Many states and local municipalities enforce prohibitions against rude, offensive or insulting speech, leaving citizens, law enforcement officers and courts to decide what is and what is not an insult. The concept of fighting words as a form of prohibited speech has developed in the jurisprudence of U.S. constitutional law concerning terms of disparagement. However, the fighting words exclusion is construed in an extraordinarily narrow manner, and only the type of insulting speech which is deemed "meaningless" can be suppressed. Speech containing significant literary, artistic, political, or scientific significance cannot be suppressed (a test known to attorneys and law students by the mnemonic device "slaps"), even if it is wantonly and maliciously insulting, demeaning, or even inciting of racial, ethnic, religious or sexual hatred.

Medical

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The role of insults in the social sense may be better understood by an appreciation of how the term is used in a medical setting. Though a popular idiom refers to "adding insult to injury", in a medical context, they are one and the same: physicians examine injuries resulting from an insult to flesh and bones, caused by various traumatic events. In speech and in social settings, insults are words which tend to injure or damage the psyche. In humor, insults may be exchanged in much the same way as fighters exchange blows in training, to develop a resistance to the pain of mild injuries, or to spar with no real intention of causing any serious injury.

Perceptions of insults

Sociologists suggest that insults are often an indicator of flawed reasoning about the character or motivation of others. Though insults are common, and often used in jest, a fundamental axiom of sociology recognizes that derogatory forms of speech make erroneous attributions about the motivation of a person. Scholars classify the erroneous assumptions as the fundamental attribution error.

Situations also exist in which a person erroneously believes he or she has been insulted. For example, terms such as "Asian", "incorrect", "drunk", or "full-cheeked" are often interpreted as derogatory, when in fact they may be neutral descriptive terms or factual statements, which, at worst, would be simply inaccurate or incorrect rather than insulting. This phenomenon often occurs in individuals who suffer self-victimization or hypersensitivity.

What qualifies as an insult is also determined both by the indiviual social situation and by changing social mores. Thus on the one hand the insulting 'obscene invitations of a man to a strange girl can be the spicy endearments of a husband to his wife';[13] on the other hand, the male gaze may be insulting in and of itself to a feminist, whereas a post-feminist might note more discriminatingly how 'his eyes took me in...[but] at least he didn't look at me offensively; and believe me, if you're a woman who works in a bar, you can tell the difference between an evaluation and an eye fuck'.[14]

See also

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Insults

References

  1. ^ Erving Goffman, Relations in Public (Penguin 1972) p. 214
  2. ^ Jacques Lacan, Écrits: A Selection (1997) p. 138
  3. ^ Goffman, p. 215-6
  4. ^ Mad, quoted in Goffman, p. 216
  5. ^ Desmond Morris, The Naked Ape Trilogy (London 1994) p. 241
  6. ^ Emma Renold, Girls, Boys, and Junior Sexualities (2005) p. 130
  7. ^ Northrop Frye, Anatomy of Criticism (Princeton 1973 )p. 270
  8. ^ G. Legman, Rationale of the Dirty Joke Vol I (1973) p. 177
  9. ^ James Boswell, The Life of Boswell (Penguin 1984) p. 269
  10. ^ Desmond Morris, Manwatching (London 1987) p. 186-192
  11. ^ George Puttenham in Boris Ford ed., The Age of Shakespeare (1973) p. 72=3
  12. ^ Peter Alexander ed., William Shakespeare: The Complete Works (London 1962) p. 282
  13. ^ Erving Goffman, Relations in Public (1972) p. 412
  14. ^ Charlaine Harris, Dead as a Doornail (London 2009) p. 26

Literature

Abuse
Types

Anti-social behaviour · Bullying · Child abuse (neglect, sexual) · Domestic abuse · Elder abuse · Harassment · Humiliation · Incivility · Institutional abuse · Intimidation · Neglect · Personal abuse · Professional abuse · Psychological abuse · Physical abuse · Sexual abuse · Stalking · Structural abuse · Verbal abuse · more...

Related topics

Complex post-traumatic stress disorder · Dehumanization · Denial · Destabilisation · Exaggeration · Grooming (adult, child) · Lying · Manipulation · Minimisation · Personality disorders · Psychological projection · Psychological trauma · Psychopathy · Rationalization (making excuses) · Victim blaming · Victim playing · Victimisation

Bullying
Types

In academia · In information technology · In medicine · In nursing · In teaching · In the military · In the workplace · Cyber-bullying · Gay bullying · Hazing · Mobbing · Passive aggression · Peer victimization · Psychological abuse · Rankism · Relational aggression · School bullying · School pranks · Verbal abuse

Elements

Betrayal · Bystanders · Character assassination · Defamation · Destabilisation · Discrediting · False accusations · Gossip · Harassment · Humiliation · Incivility · Innuendo · Insult · Intimidation · Jibe · Moving the goalposts · Personal attacks · Psychological manipulation · Rudeness · Sarcasm · Setting up to fail · Smear campaign · Social rejection · Social undermining · Taunting · Teasing · Whispering campaign · Yelling

Organisations

Act Against Bullying · Beatbullying · Bullying UK · Kidscape · GRIN Campaign

Activists

Andrea Adams · Louise Burfitt-Dons · Tim Field · Andy Hickson · Heinz Leymann · Gary Namie · Kenneth Westhues

Actions

Anti-Bullying Day · Anti-Bullying Week · International STAND UP to Bullying Day · Anti-bullying legislation

High-profile suicides

Tyler Clementi · Ryan Halligan · Megan Meier · Phoebe Prince · Nicola Ann Raphael · Dawn-Marie Wesley · Kelly Yeomans · Jeff Weise · Jim in Bold · Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold · Seung-Hui Cho · Jamey Rodemeyer · Jamie Hubley · R. Budd Dwyer

Related topics

Abuse · Bullycide · Control freak · Complex post-traumatic stress disorder · Emotional blackmail · Just-world hypothesis · Narcissism · Personal boundaries · Personality disorders · Psychological projection · Psychological trauma · Psychopathy · Scapegoating · Self-esteem · Sycophancy · Victim blaming · Victim playing · Victimisation · Youth subculture

Emotions (list)
Emotions

Adoration · Affection · Agony · Awe · Amusement · Anger · Anguish · Annoyance · Anxiety · Arousal · Attraction · Caring · Compassion · Contempt · Contentment · Defeat · Dejection · Depression · Desire · Despair · Disappointment · Disgust · Ecstasy · Embarrassment · Empathy · Enthrallment · Enthusiasm · Envy · Euphoria · Excitement · Fear · Frustration · Grief · Guilt · Happiness · Hatred · Homesickness · Hope · Horror · Hostility · Humiliation · Hysteria · Infatuation · Insecurity · Insult · Irritation · Isolation · Jealousy · Loneliness · Longing · Love · Lust · Melancholy · Neglect · Optimism · Panic · Passion · Pity · Pleasure · Pride · Rage · Regret · Rejection · Remorse · Resentment · Sadness · Sentimentality · Shame · Shock · Sorrow · Spite · Suffering · Surprise · Sympathy · Tenseness · Thrill · Revenge · Worry · Zeal · Zest

Worldviews Compatibilism · Existentialism · Fatalism · Incompatibilism · Metaphysics · Nihilism · Optimism · Pessimism · Reclusion · Social justice · Weltschmerz
Source: Parrott, W. (2001), Emotions in Social Psychology, Psychology Press, Philadelphia.

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