
In December of 1989, mourners flowed into the Great Hall at St Bartholomew's Hospital to hear former Monty Python group member and cancer victim Graham Chapman eulogized.
Yet, Chapmanās longtime writing partner John Cleese offered more of a roast than a eulogy.
āGood riddance to him, the freeloading bastard, I hope he fries,ā Cleese deadpanned, claiming Chapman would have never forgiven him if he didnāt take the opportunity to shock everyone on his behalf.
As he finished, Cleese imagined a discussion in which the late Chapman urged him āto become the first person ever at a British memorial service to say āfuck.āā
One of the worldās funniest people, Cleese understood the power in using a vulgar word in a staid context. When the profane clashed against the sacred, it helped everyone in the audience release the sadness and tension that had built.
Profanity similarly achieves the same goal in our lives. Obscenities can help us cope with extreme circumstances, can signal to others when weāre being playful or serious, and can even help others know when weāre telling the truth. Fewer things are as satisfying as conducting a symphony of swear words to provoke a reaction.
But what if the concept of profanity vanished?
In 2020, virtually all of the guardrails that have kept obscenity out of public life are gone. People watch television on streaming apps like Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime, and HBO Now, where profanity is de rigueur.
Even basic cable has lifted its language limitsāaudiences recently delighted as the 1990s-era Chicago Bulls brought locker room language to our living rooms in ESPNās āThe Last Danceā documentary series. Fans who have watched televised NBA games without spectators in the seats have no doubt caught some fragrant words despite the networksā efforts to block them with delays and crowd noise.
Public debates take place on Twitter and Facebook, where regular people get to talk exactly how regular people talk. (HBO now owns exclusive rights to Sesame Street, where presumably Oscar the Grouch will one day graciously thank Big Bird for inviting him to āeat shit.ā)
Even legacy media outlets are getting in on the act, with bestseller lists including book titles like Mark Mansonās The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck, Gary John Bishopās Unf*ck Yourself, John Kimās I Used to Be a Miserable F*ck, and of course, the childrenās book parody Go the F**k to Sleep by Adam Mansbach.
Newscasts are also getting in on the action. During coverage of the George Floyd-related protests, cable news broadcasts made little effort to shield the public from fragrant language and graffiti. In February, former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich tried to make the case that he was a āpolitical prisonerā to CNN anchor Anderson Cooper. The normally composed Cooper declared Blagojevichās pleadings to be ābullshit.ā
And, of course, politicians have seized on the new era of public vulgarities, often uttering verboten words on the record.
President Donald Trump leads the pack in this regard, seasoning many of his statements with language befitting his Queens upbringing. Some newspapers have had to re-imagine their style guides during the Trump era to catch all the presidentās profanities. (The Washington Post, which printed the word ābullshitā five times in one day, compared Trump to President Camacho of the movie Idiocracy, who began his State of the Union Address by saying, āShit. I know shitās bad right now.ā)
Trumpās opponents have often tried to match his profane effluence. When a media outlet reported former Secretary of State John Kerry was considering a late entry to the 2020 Democratic presidential primary, Kerry responded with a tweet (later deleted) that said he was not getting in the race and that āany report otherwise is fucking (or categorically) false.ā
Current vice presidential candidate Kamala Harris referred to Trumpās proposals as ābullshit.ā Failed Presidential candidate Tulsi Gabbard called Trump āSaudi Arabiaās bitch.ā
And, of course, who could forget the Bard of Bravado, former presidential candidate Beto OāRourke? When answering a question about a mass shooting in Odessa, Texas last year, OāRourke said āWe donāt yet know what the motivation is ⦠but we do know this is fucked up.ā
After OāRourkeās utterance, columnist John McWhorter of The Atlantic took up the soon-to-be-ex-candidateās cause, arguing āfuckā as a public punctuation is no longer any worse than ādamnā or āhell.ā
āThe truth is that in 2019, using the F-word is quite commensurate with being clean of scrub,ā wrote McWhorter, arguing the word is āless obscene than salty.ā Shifting linguistic mores, he argued, have rendered the word āspicy, but hardly evil or taboo.ā
OāRourke made no apology for his verbal habanero, as his campaign soon began selling t-shirts adorned with the words āTHIS IS F*CKED UP.ā His continued use of the word on the campaign trail hinted his newfound love of public profanity was more of a media stunt than a sincere heat-of-the-moment expression of frustration.
Profanity is nothing new, and nor is widespread indifference to it. Throughout history, there have been eras when the rampant use of obscenities was commonplace. But those times were characterized by a broader cultural coarsenessāthe societal mores were so crude, āswearingā or ācursingā hardly seemed out of bounds.
Similarly, the current acceptance of profanity isnāt causing cultural rotāit is merely a symptom of it.
Niggling over the president calling predominantly minority nations āshitholeā countries or Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib promising to āimpeach this motherfuckerā is like watching pornography and getting upset when an actress curses. There have to be rules of propriety in play for something to offend āif society itself is vulgar, then obscenities no longer shock.
Further, the twin crises of the COVID-19 pandemic and the protests and riots following the death of George Floyd have demonstrated another historical trend: When society is under duress, policing language no longer takes priority.
Like John Cleese saying āfuckā in a church, the broader context is everything.
There may be no era of literature more bawdy and obscene than the medieval era. Chaucerās Canterbury Tales, written in 1386, features one character telling another that his rhyming is ānot worth a turd,ā and features terms like āarse,ā and ācoillons,ā a crude synonym for ātesticles.ā Chaucer also generously uses anachronisms such as ādightā (screw) and āswive,ā a term interchangeable with āfuck.ā Chaucer referred to corrupt priests as āshitten shepherds.ā
Another mid-fifteenth century poem, A Talk of Ten Wives on Their Husbands Ware, features women discussing the size of their husbandsā penises. One complaining her husbandās āmeatā is the size of a snail, one says his āwareā is the size of three beans, and one observes that when her husbandās pants have a hole in them, his āpenis peeps out of the hole like a maggot.ā
As author Melissa Mohr argues in her lively book Holy Sh*t: A Brief History of Swearing, the 15th and 16th centuries were a time when life for the average person was crude and indiscreet. The concept of a private restroom had not yet caught on, so after a big meal, someone might just walk over to the corner of the dining room and drop a deuce. Male and female servants often slept naked in the same room as their masters, leading one historian to remark that āthe sight of total nakedness was the everyday rule up to the 16th century.ā
In other words, the medieval era made Game of Thrones look like Downton Abbey.
It wasnāt until the late sixteenth century that architectural innovations began taking into account the unique notion that some people might actually want privacy. The idea began with the upper classes and then trickled down to the masses, who began walling themselves off from others in bedrooms and lavatories.
This physical separation and the rise of Protestantism coincided with a growth in the concept of shame.
āPrivacy created what weāve seen Elias call āthe invisible wall of affects,ā and with it the embarrassment and shame at the sight or mention of bodily functions that medieval people lacked,ā writes Mohr.
āSixteenth-century people were ashamed of more things than their medieval forebears, and ashamed in front of more people,ā Mohr writes. āIt became more and more important to conceal these various shameful body parts and actions, in public life and in polite language.ā
The new emphasis on shame led some sixteenth century linguists to begin defining what words could be said and which ones were āobscenus.ā In 1587, a new Latin-English dictionary counsels that the āfilthie, foule, uncleane, wanton, bawdie, unchast, ribauldrie, abhominable,ā and ādishonestā should be avoided.
Interestingly, these new rules of propriety did not apply to those whom had nothing for which to be ashamedāthat is, people in positions of power. A lord, for instance, may talk about the size of his package in the presence of his inferiorsābeing tawdry and indecent was a power move meant to demonstrate oneās social superiority. (According to journals kept by AndrĆ© Hurault, Queen Elizabeth was fond of baring her breasts in front of the French ambassador to show her condescensionāshe was 64 years old at the time.)
Soon, indecent language was relegated to the commoners, who enjoyed ālowā entertainment like the plays of Shakespeare. The Bard, of course, was filthy, but often cloaked his sexual content in euphemism and innuendo. (For instance, when Hamlet tells Ophelia, āDo you think I meant country matters?,ā heās discussing anatomy, not geography.)
According to Mohr, obscene words violated class norms during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
āThey were seen as the language of the lower classes, the uneducatedāand accessed the deepest taboo of Augustan and Victorian society, the human body and its embarrassing desires, which had to be absolutely hidden away in swaths of fabric and disguised in euphemisms,ā she writes.
Consequently, many American families changed their names to avoid embarrassing connotationsāfor instance, Little Women author Louisa May Alcottās original family name was āAlcox.ā
Naturally, that didnāt mean people denied themselves the delights of the occasional obscenity. The notoriously tawdry Benjamin Franklin, writing pseudonymously in Poor Richardās Almanack, zinged the upper classes with jibes like "The greatest monarch on the proudest throne is obliged to sit upon his own arse," and "Force shits upon reason's back."
Until modern times, however, profanity was largely kept out of the public record. Official writings and news accounts rarely reported obscene acts. In the course of writing a book about the year 1916, I read hundreds of news reports from that yearāin one instance, a burglar stole an āiron manā from a sorority girlās dresser drawer. In another, a man and a woman were arrested for engaging in a āsoul kissā in an alley. A different man was arrested for soliciting a ācommercialized hug.ā (The paper noted he āwalked away in the arms of the law.ā) And so on.
Yet court records, which were obliged to transcribe testimony verbatim, suggest that common folk used profanity much in the same way we do now.
For example, in one 1836 case, a woman named Mary Hamilton was charged with public obscenity for walking behind a group of women and telling them to āgo and fuck themselvesāāthe first recorded use of this phrase. (Why there is no statue of Mary Hamilton commemorating this milestone remains a mystery.)
And while courts and society alike have wrestled with the issues of profanity and indecency forever (insert obligatory George Carlin āseven words you canāt say on televisionā reference here), the linguistic handcuffs are all but off in the internet era. The idea that one should be prohibited from swearing is a quaint one when censor-free quotes rocket around Twitter and Facebook.
And it is social media that has contributed to the coarseness of political dialogueāācancelingā the insufficiently woke and āowning the libsā now rule the day, when angry retweets serve as rocket fuel for online platforms. One study estimates one in every 13 tweets contains a profanity, with āfuckā making up 34.7 percent of the obscenities used.
YouTube videos, streaming music apps, and podcasts are virtually unencumbered by language filters. According to the Wall Street Journal, 70 percent of children 10 years of age and under subscribe to TikTok, the preferred app for teenagers lip-syncing to profane hip-hop songs.
In an everything-goes culture in which the president is not only elected in spite of talking about the size of his junk during a debate, but instead because of it, policing the appropriateness of language is a lost cause. People wave off the indiscretions of a philandering, porn star-loving president who picks fights with war heroes because they feel it is necessary to teach the political cognoscenti a lesson.
Mohr told me she agrees that the āf-wordā is becoming less powerful because its use is less taboo, but that it is being replaced by racial slurs and epithets. āI used to think eventually the racial slurs would lose their power too, and weād come up with something else, but at least right now itās hard to see that happening,ā Mohr said.
Mohr said she didnāt necessarily see the greater acceptance of swearing as a negativeāshe thinks it is more just a result of fewer societal limits on cursing. āI donāt think decorum is dead,ā she said.
āPart of decorum is paying attention to other people and trying to not offend them,ā said Mohr. āIf I was going to locate a point of cultural decline, I might do it there. Some people seem to think whatever they are feeling, itās important for them to express it at all times,ā she said.
But there is no longer a dividing line between what Mohr deems the āHolyāā the sense of propriety and religious conviction that polices languageāand the āShitāāthe obscene. It is Trump, after all, that thrust the word āpussyā into our homes in 2016, and his behavior has actually devolved since then.
It is impossible to tarnish what is, by definition, tarnish.
This is not to argue that profanity isnāt useful or necessaryāquite the opposite. Profanity serves many crucial purposes that innocent euphemisms just canāt deliver.
For one, swearing has physiological benefitsāin one study, researchers showed subjects were able to keep their hand in cold water for a longer period of time when allowed to say the word āshitā instead of āshoot.ā
āI would advise people, if they hurt themselves, to swear,ā said the studyās lead researcher, Richard Stephens.
Profanities are also easier to rememberāthrow one into a public utterance, and amygdalas light up, helping semi-attentive people recall what they heard. According to cognitive psychologist Steven Pinker, swearing triggers an electrophysical response āthat emanates from the anterior cingulate cortex, a part of the limbic system involved in the monitoring of cognitive conflictāāalternately known as the āOh Shit Wave.ā
Pinker also notes that hearing a profanity will often cause an individual to stop what they are doing and pay more attention. This is the thinking behind brands adopting names that sort-of sound like obscenities, such as the restaurant chain Fuddruckers. (At this point, we might as well finally fulfill the prophecy of the movie Idiocracy and resign ourselves to the fact there will one day be a restaurant called āButtfuckers.ā)
Further, while profanities can lead to physical violence, they often serve as a substitute. On the scale of hurting another, swearing is about as violent as one can be without punching someone. In some venues, people who swear are even seen as more honest, as they are āthe kind of person who would not mince words to spare someoneās feelings or sense of decency.ā
Nor should anyone be thought of as less intelligent when they use profanity. It is an old canard that those who swear only do so because they canāt think of a better word to describe something. In 1934, Cole Porter made this point, singing, āGood authors, too, who once knew better words / Now only use four-letter words / Writing prose, anything goes.ā
But sometimes, you just need the right goddamn word, regardless of social status. If I loudly deem Sean Hannity to be āreplete with biosolids,ā it simply doesnāt have the same rhetorical swag as if I opted for the crude alternative. (Spending time among the linguistically chaste Mormons in Utah, I picked up the term āfootsackingā to use in place of āfucking,ā and it never made me feel better when McDonaldās got my drive-thru order wrong.)
As history has shown us, there will always be things we can and canāt say. Ironically, the political left, once the driving force behind comedian Lenny Bruceās right to offend with impunity, is hard at work policing what currently can be uttered in polite society. College campuses are awash in complaints against professors and students alike who commit the sins of misgendering individuals and referring toābut not usingāthe ānā word. (Interestingly, as Pinker notes, this public language regulation process has changed some words, like āqueer,ā from good to bad, then back to good again.)
But breaking these taboos is far less satisfactory than swearing. When I canāt find my car keys, I will not calmly explain something that might irritate someoneās delicate sensibilitiesāI will need to commit a full-on act of macroaggression with unspeakable words said at maximum volume.
Soon, those words will be just like any other words. Sure, people arenāt defecating in the streets like medieval times, but our cultural coarseness has rendered profanity a triviality.
āSwearing with panache has always been associated, in my mind at least, with a willingness to take risks, and not just linguistic ones,ā wrote author Gully Wells in 2014. āIt's rebellion against convention and having the confidence not to care what people think,ā she wrote.
But there appear to be few conventions left to break and even fewer people who care.
And that is a fucking tragedy.