Book Chapter

Purity and punning: Political fundamentalism and semantic pollution

M Herzfeld

Purity and Danger Now New Perspectives | ROUTLEDGE | Published : 2017

Abstract

Mary Douglas once remarked to this writer that in England only aristocrats and working-class people enjoyed puns; everyone else thought they were a debased form of humour – a verbal habit that displayed the suggestively labelled solecism of poor taste. Her perspective was entirely consistent with her theories of purity and danger (Douglas, [1966] 2002), inasmuch as it suggested the risks attendant, for a bourgeois sensibility, of anything that would destabilise semantic certainty. Puns almost invariably – because conventionally – elicit groans of protest. The more ingenious they are, the louder the groans. Puns are deliberate exercises in disorder, a threat to the functionalist view that lan..

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University of Melbourne Researchers