I love profanity. I love the rhythm and flavour it can add to a sentence. I want to poke the hornet's nest of profanity and blogging -- should I maintain a corporate tone here? Will the occasional expletive make someone decide not to buy my books? make them decide to buy my books? Is this also a gender and cultural issue, whereby I act like "one of da b'ys" by using profanity? Whoever said cussing was solely the province and privilege of da b'ys? Am I still a good mother if I don't use profanity around my kids? But then can I use it at a reading they're attending? Is it okay for my characters to use it, but not my narrators? Who's in charge here?
Fuck this.
OnePlusYou Quizzes and Widgets
(I found this at http://missingtherock.blogspot.com/. Nadine also has a few words to say on the subject.)
2 comments:
I think the c* words are far more potent than the f* word, or even the m*f* word, on your meter.
But I wonder what exactly _is_ wrong with being a c*s*er. There's pleasure in that, no? (Aren't c*s*ers needed/desired?) As in c*, and f*. Not m*f* - for most people.
Thoughts?
-Hilary
WARNING: Strong language follows. Reader discretion is advised. Don't say I didn't warn ya. Still with me?
Hilary, I wonder if "cunt" and "cocksucker" aren't considered extra offensisve because of the hard "ck" sound, and because they both make the recepient seem more feminine, more passive. A cunt receives; a cocksucker kneels. Yeah, I know, a cunt is way more than a receptacle, as is the person who fellates his or her male partner. But traditionally, the cunt was (in some places, is) considered no more than a receptacle with an inconvenient sub-human attached to it, just as a woman was once viewed as merely a bake-oven for a man's homunculus-riddled seed. English, God, such a beautiful and barbarous language.
-- mbh
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