So, what's taboo?
Posted: Mon Jan 28, 2008 1:15 am
Just a ponderous pondering that I did ponder earlier in the evening (as I am wont to do when making coffee).
What exactly is taboo these days? Surely all sorts of sexuality have been removed from taboo and have become a source of morbid interest (2 girls, 1 cup/Goatse/Tubgirl/Pain Olympics and so forth) - sexuality isn't the taboo it once was. If anything, we're openly intrigued these days.
Religion - there's still an element of taboo here, but no so much as there used to be (for example, 'Taking the lord's name in vain' isn't something that causes consternation anymore). Multiculturalism and the rise in spiritual apathy (with no disrespect to either theists or atheists) have killed off the great religious taboo.
Now, traditionally speaking, sex and religion were the two major taboos in, at least, Western society.
I propose that these days, it's the body and physical contact. Here's a little game for you to play. Try to use the word "touch" in conversation. Instead of saying "I was petting my dog," say, "I touched my dog." Instead of saying, "I bumped into that guy," say, "I touched that guy."
Observe the reaction.
If anything, 'touch' is one of the most taboo words in English these days, followed closely by the genital words that we've all seen written over toilet cubicles and that don't need listing.
Double question:
1. Do you agree? If you don't, then what do you see as taboo?
2. If your answer to #1 is 'yes' - why do you think that the body and physical contact is so taboo in modern Western society and what does it say about us? (Anyone who reference Clause 28 here gets bonus points).
What exactly is taboo these days? Surely all sorts of sexuality have been removed from taboo and have become a source of morbid interest (2 girls, 1 cup/Goatse/Tubgirl/Pain Olympics and so forth) - sexuality isn't the taboo it once was. If anything, we're openly intrigued these days.
Religion - there's still an element of taboo here, but no so much as there used to be (for example, 'Taking the lord's name in vain' isn't something that causes consternation anymore). Multiculturalism and the rise in spiritual apathy (with no disrespect to either theists or atheists) have killed off the great religious taboo.
Now, traditionally speaking, sex and religion were the two major taboos in, at least, Western society.
I propose that these days, it's the body and physical contact. Here's a little game for you to play. Try to use the word "touch" in conversation. Instead of saying "I was petting my dog," say, "I touched my dog." Instead of saying, "I bumped into that guy," say, "I touched that guy."
Observe the reaction.
If anything, 'touch' is one of the most taboo words in English these days, followed closely by the genital words that we've all seen written over toilet cubicles and that don't need listing.
Double question:
1. Do you agree? If you don't, then what do you see as taboo?
2. If your answer to #1 is 'yes' - why do you think that the body and physical contact is so taboo in modern Western society and what does it say about us? (Anyone who reference Clause 28 here gets bonus points).