History of the Phrase
The alleged existence of political correctness, both the movement and the term describing it, rose to broad usage in the early 1980s. Many leftists allege that the term "political correctness" started as a label jokingly used to describe one's overcommittment to various political causes. In the view of one conservative commentator, Bill Lind, however, the intellectual roots and attitudes associated with PC are many decades old [1] and rooted in radical leftist movements. Also, in a linguistics mailing list [1], there was discussion of the term used--sometimes quite straight-facedly--in the early and middle 1970s. Use of the terms "PC" and "politically correct" declined in the late 1990s, and the allegedly repressive political attitudes associated with these beliefs have started to fall out of favor somewhat, but it is asserted that the above-described attitudes associated with political correctness are still very strong in many universities and other institutions.
Satirizing PC
A well-known satirical take on this alleged movement can be found in the book Politically Correct Bedtime Stories, in which traditional fairy tales are rewritten from a so-called politically correct viewpoint and often reverse the roles of good and evil from those of the original version. For example, Hansel, Gretel and their father are evil and the witch is good in the politically correct version of Hansel and Gretel.
The practice of satirizing so-called PC speech indeed took on a life of its own in the 1990s, though it is no longer so popular. Part of what it is to understand the meaning of "PC" is to be familiar with satirical portrayals of political correctness, and to understand them as such. Such portrayals are often exaggerations of what actual politically correct speech looks like. For example, in a satirical example of so-called PC speech, the sentence "The fireman put a ladder up against the tree, climbed it, and rescued the cat" might look like this:
- The firefighter (who happened to be male, but could just as easily have been female) abridged the rights of the cat to determine for itself where it wanted to walk, climb, or rest, and inflicted his own value judgments in determining that it needed to be "rescued" from its chosen perch. In callous disregard for the well-being of the environment, and this one tree in particular, he thrust the mobilitly disadvantaged-unfriendly means of ascent known as a "ladder" carelessly up against the tree, marring its bark, and unfeelingly climbed it, unconcerned how his display of physical prowess might injure the self-esteem of those differently abled. He kidnapped and unjustly restrained the innocent animal with the intention of returning it to the person who claimed to "own" the naturally free animal, but it immediately fled his grasp, having withstood more insult and injury than it could bear.
The above text admixes the most radical versions of several movements or theories, including non-sexist language, animal rights, cultural relativism, accessibility, emotional development, and environmentalism. In fact, almost any so-called PC speaker would most likely be perfectly satisfied with "The firefighter put a ladder up against the tree, climbed it, and rescued the cat." Furthermore, the fire protection services have always preferred "firefighter" to "fireman", dating from many years before PC and discrimination against male firefighters.
The satire is not necessarily an anti-PC or pro-PC statement. This particular text, for example, is often enjoyed by both liberal and conservative readers.
Derivation:
The term "political correctness" was co-opted by the white power elite as a tool for attacking multiculturalism, and it is therefore not "politically correct" to use it.
See also: Doublespeak, propaganda, Hate speech, non-sexist language, Politically Incorrect, Newspeak.
Further Reading
- Diane Ravitch, The Language Police: How Pressure Groups Restrict What Students Learn, Knopf, 2003, hardcover, 255 pages, ISBN 0-375-41482-71
- Henry Beard and Christopher Cerf, The Official Politically Correct Dictionary and Handbook, Harper Collins, 1992, paperback 176 pages, ISBN 0-586-21726-6
External Link
- Tongue Tied — documents alleged ongoing censorship of politically incorrect speech or expression in the United States.