Curses! Five books about swearing
December 18, 2011 | M | Comments (1)
…nothing is more fatal to maidenly delicacy of speech than the run of a good library.
Robertson Davies, Tempest-Tost
I was a mere child when I began my library career and I soon discovered that my co-workers would sometimes use "decidedly unparliamentary" language in the staff room. Swearing librarians just seemed wrong somehow. Later I came to realize that some people who love words, love the “bad” ones, too. As Robertson Davies observed, books can be a bad influence on a civil tongue.
Here is a selection of books about profanity available at Toronto Public Library:
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Expletive Deleted: a Good Look at Bad Words by Ruth Wajnryb
Australian linguist Wajnryb provides both research and wit in her examination of foul language.
The F-Word by Jesse Sheidlower
Now in its third edition, the book details the history and usage of the “most controversial word in the English language”.
Filthy English: The How, Where, When and What of Everyday Swearing by Pete Silverton
Silverton examines the British evolution into a more "linguistically liberal" society.
Forbidden Words: Taboo and the Censoring of Language by Keith Allan and Kate Burridge
The authors provide insight into the role of taboo language in everyday life.
Seven Dirty Words: the Life and Crimes of George Carlin by James Sullivan
In 1973, a radio station broadcast a George Carlin monologue called "Filthy Words". The subsequent uproar led to a Supreme Court decision affirming the federal government's power to regulate speech on radio and television broadcasts in the United States.
