2016
DOI: 10.1007/s12136-016-0313-0
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Appropriate Slurs

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Slurs alongside #NotYourShield can also be used ironically, jokingly, or as terms of endearment rather than to inflict damage to an interest, as scholars (see Allan, 2015;Croom, 2013;Jaszczolt, 2016;Maitra & McGowan, 2012;Pryor, 2016;Zimmerman, 2012) These reclamatory and resistance-based uses of slurs are noteworthy since they suggest, contrary to arguments put forth by Bolinger, that it is not always true that "in choosing to use a slurring term rather than its neutral counterpart, the speaker signals that she endorses the term (and its associations)" (2017, p. 439). Indeed, a vast body of literature (Allan, 2015;Bianchi, 2014;Bolinger, 2017;Brontsema, 2004;DiFranco, 2017;Herbert, 2015;Hom, 2008;Jeshion, 2013;Parks & Jones, 2008;Pryor, 2016;Saka, 2007) acknowledges that although slurs can serve as linguistic mechanisms of subordination, "re-appropriating these terms can be a strategy to fight back against social injustice [and], when successful, reclamation is the subversion of powerful mechanisms of oppression" (Herbert, 2015, p. 131). In academia, most often this phenomenon is addressed in the context of LGBTQ members' self-referential re-appropriation of "queer" (Bianchi, 2014;Brontsema, 2004;Hom, 2008;Jeshion, 2013;Saka, 2007) and in black communities' re-appropriation of the term "nigger" (Allan, 2015;Parks & Jones, 2008;Pryor, 2016).…”
Section: -Beyond Faggotry: Gamergate and #Notyourshieldmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Slurs alongside #NotYourShield can also be used ironically, jokingly, or as terms of endearment rather than to inflict damage to an interest, as scholars (see Allan, 2015;Croom, 2013;Jaszczolt, 2016;Maitra & McGowan, 2012;Pryor, 2016;Zimmerman, 2012) These reclamatory and resistance-based uses of slurs are noteworthy since they suggest, contrary to arguments put forth by Bolinger, that it is not always true that "in choosing to use a slurring term rather than its neutral counterpart, the speaker signals that she endorses the term (and its associations)" (2017, p. 439). Indeed, a vast body of literature (Allan, 2015;Bianchi, 2014;Bolinger, 2017;Brontsema, 2004;DiFranco, 2017;Herbert, 2015;Hom, 2008;Jeshion, 2013;Parks & Jones, 2008;Pryor, 2016;Saka, 2007) acknowledges that although slurs can serve as linguistic mechanisms of subordination, "re-appropriating these terms can be a strategy to fight back against social injustice [and], when successful, reclamation is the subversion of powerful mechanisms of oppression" (Herbert, 2015, p. 131). In academia, most often this phenomenon is addressed in the context of LGBTQ members' self-referential re-appropriation of "queer" (Bianchi, 2014;Brontsema, 2004;Hom, 2008;Jeshion, 2013;Saka, 2007) and in black communities' re-appropriation of the term "nigger" (Allan, 2015;Parks & Jones, 2008;Pryor, 2016).…”
Section: -Beyond Faggotry: Gamergate and #Notyourshieldmentioning
confidence: 99%