- Joined
- Jan 15, 2006
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Democrats, socialists.
Republicans, Nazis.
Tea Party, Taliban.
And on and on.
Most automatically insert an equals sign in between -- but is that what's being said? To do that shows a very shallow grasp of the English language, or a desire to be snide and put others down... or both.
See, the English language has more than one way to make a comparison. There's the equation route, putting in that equals sign, but that's a simple-minded lazy one. There's the allegorical route -- sort of the other end of the spectrum, it's subtle and can be pretty deep. In between there are analogy, simile, hyperbole, and metaphor (some add parable, but that is separate, really, because it can employ more than one of those to make a single point). So when one encounters a comparison, there's a question that has to be asked:
That's what isn't being asked, though that failure makes people look like fools. Here's an example, one used often on JUB -- and almost as often misunderstood:
The knee jerk response, bypassing grey matter, of many is to say "Gay Republicans = Nazi Jews". Besides being grammatically ignorant, it's... doubly grammatically ignorant, because of that word "like". It isn't a universal rule, but when the word "like" rests between two substantives, the phrase or statement is almost always a simile.
Here's a good illustration of a simile:
And here's a metaphor, one commonly made use of in university courses:
All the world's a stage, and all the men and women but players.
Hopefully most here recognize the work of the Bard. Hopefully, most also recognize that Shakespeare isn't saying the world is a flat surface with side wings and curtains and walkways above for moving scenery about.
Obviously, the gay~Jew comparison isn't a metaphor, but rather a simile. The problem with similes is that one has to ask, "What is the point of comparison?" Hopefully, with the gay~Jew comparison, it isn't that gays are a distinct race, and isn't that Republicans are Nazis; the first is obviously wrong -- but to anyone with a fair smattering of literacy, so is the second.
Enough of the lecture; time for discussion. What I'd like to see is posters who've made such comparisons telling us what sort they were making (simile, metaphor, analogy), and what they meant. Those who have misunderstood keep silent, unless you have an observation about the grammar and a rational statement for why you think the original poster wasn't doing what he says he was.
So...
be now like a pack of beavers, building....
Republicans, Nazis.
Tea Party, Taliban.
And on and on.
Most automatically insert an equals sign in between -- but is that what's being said? To do that shows a very shallow grasp of the English language, or a desire to be snide and put others down... or both.
See, the English language has more than one way to make a comparison. There's the equation route, putting in that equals sign, but that's a simple-minded lazy one. There's the allegorical route -- sort of the other end of the spectrum, it's subtle and can be pretty deep. In between there are analogy, simile, hyperbole, and metaphor (some add parable, but that is separate, really, because it can employ more than one of those to make a single point). So when one encounters a comparison, there's a question that has to be asked:
What is the point of the comparison?
That's what isn't being asked, though that failure makes people look like fools. Here's an example, one used often on JUB -- and almost as often misunderstood:
Gay Republicans are like Jews supporting Hitler.
The knee jerk response, bypassing grey matter, of many is to say "Gay Republicans = Nazi Jews". Besides being grammatically ignorant, it's... doubly grammatically ignorant, because of that word "like". It isn't a universal rule, but when the word "like" rests between two substantives, the phrase or statement is almost always a simile.
Here's a good illustration of a simile:
Faster than a speeding bullet....
And here's a metaphor, one commonly made use of in university courses:
All the world's a stage, and all the men and women but players.
Hopefully most here recognize the work of the Bard. Hopefully, most also recognize that Shakespeare isn't saying the world is a flat surface with side wings and curtains and walkways above for moving scenery about.
Obviously, the gay~Jew comparison isn't a metaphor, but rather a simile. The problem with similes is that one has to ask, "What is the point of comparison?" Hopefully, with the gay~Jew comparison, it isn't that gays are a distinct race, and isn't that Republicans are Nazis; the first is obviously wrong -- but to anyone with a fair smattering of literacy, so is the second.
Enough of the lecture; time for discussion. What I'd like to see is posters who've made such comparisons telling us what sort they were making (simile, metaphor, analogy), and what they meant. Those who have misunderstood keep silent, unless you have an observation about the grammar and a rational statement for why you think the original poster wasn't doing what he says he was.
So...
be now like a pack of beavers, building....





























