The words and phrases that we use reflect and reaffirm our culturally conditioned perceptions of what is normal and what is abnormal. Examples include the use of âdisabled toiletsâ but the absence of âable-bodied toiletsâ, and âworking momâ but not âworking dadâ.
This is the first of Eviatar Zerubavelâs main points. His second is that what is not âmarkedâ with specific labels is often the âdefaultâ: for example, a common default assumption is that people are able-bodied. This is the âtaken for grantedâ of his title. His third point is that âmarkedâ and âunmarkedâ phrases can reflect and be used for sociopolitical ends, such as to appeal to or provide a platform for specific groups. The slogan âBlack Lives Matterâ is offered as an example.
Zerubavel is as interested in foregrounding the culturally âinvisibleâ norms as he is in the ways that we draw attention, linguistically, to the abnormal. He presents swathes of examples of words and phrases used to âunmarkâ the âhitherto markedâ (for example, calling what has been termed âwomenâs soccerâ just âsoccerâ) and to âmarkâ and make âculturally visibleâ the âhitherto unmarkedâ (such as âcisgenderâ and his own coinage for a white âdefaultâ, âleukonormativityâ).
The book goes beyond claiming that âAmericanâ culture takes for granted âmaleness, whiteness and able-bodiednessâ to argue that this embodies âwhat we conventionally consider to be normalâ.
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Zerubavel also briefly acknowledges that âmarkednessâ varies across different subcultures and situations (for example, sickness is abnormal in general, but the norm in hospitals).
Significantly, though, Zerubavel does not address the many reasons why someone might choose to use a specific term in a particular situation and/or set of (inevitably intermingling) subcultures. Also, although one topic is âsemiotic asymmetryâ, he does not notice the functional asymmetry in the terms that he compares. For example, he contrasts âpolyamoryâ with âmonoamoryâ, rather than the word more often used as its opposite â âmonogamyâ. âPolyamoryâ is used more frequently than âmonoamoryâ, certainly, but its âmarkednessâ is not so clear when compared with the frequency of âmonogamyâ.
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A further methodological issue is that Zerubavelâs most common source of evidence is the number of web pages on which a word or phrase is shown as occurring if searched for on Google, which he presents as a reflection of how frequently it is used in society, and in turn how socially âmarkedâ it is. Given that heâs searching only in English, and using a 25-year-wide, international corpus, this is a problematic way to make claims about polylingual contemporary North American culture â and online discourse does not represent all discourse.
Taken for Granted is an interesting, thought-provoking, easy read, and the bibliography presents a wealth of impressively cross-disciplinary influences, each worth investigating. The book is most poignant, though, in revealing how quickly use of âmarkedâ language, and underlying cultural norms, can shift. For example, Zerubavelâs claim that adults presume heteronormativity when talking to teenagers is thankfully, within my subcultures at least, swiftly becoming out of date.
Andrea Macrae is a senior lecturer in stylistics at Oxford Brookes University.
Taken for Granted: The Remarkable Power of the Unremarkable
By Eviatar Zerubavel
Princeton University Press
160pp, ÂŁ14.95
ISBN 9780691177366
Published 9 May 2018
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POSTSCRIPT:
Headline: Can we undo the default setting?
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