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#21 | ||
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I will note that Mr. Eagleton appears to have intended his use of philistine in the context of a person deficient in the culture of the liberal arts (unkind to say the least). Frankly, I have yet to see philistine used in an explicit or even implicit racial sense despite the fact that The New York Times does infrequently resort to its use. I have not seen the term Entartete used outside of textbooks except when actually referring to the 1937 exhibition (the article concerned a Paul Klee painting I believe). And quite thankfully, I have never seen the term Untermensch used in your proposed context. Frankly, I am unsure whether it has any meaning other than subhuman with the all too real and horrible historical connotations that word carries. Given your evocation of Untermensch and Entartete, I concede the field and assure you that I will excise philistine from my vocabulary. Laura |
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#22 |
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Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: San Bernardino, Calif.
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It's a secular kind of Original Sin. If the first people to use an expression were expressing racism with it, then the expression to this day can never be anything but racist.
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