Friday, September 2, 2011

Introduction

Words are not sticks and stones, but we use words to get people to throw sticks and stones. Words are like magic—that's why magic spells are such a part of magic's trope. And words, in order to work, in order to work their magic, have to mean something.

Words are slippery. Words are malleable. They are not the rocks beneath our collective understanding we want them to be, because they shift in their meaning, subject to our changing wants and our collective will (or lack of will). But we still use them, because we don't seem to have any better tool at hand to work that magic, to reshape our world to meet our desires.

We lie with words, and we tell the truth with words. What makes those words into truth or untruth is not the words themselves, but how well those words match up to the things they describe. And we have gotten way too lazy about making that connection.

And so this blog. Each entry I will pick a word and try to get at what we mean, and sometimes what we ought to mean, when we invoke it. Some of the words are at the forefront of political speech (jobs, freedom, government), others are parts of my particular life (Quaker, map, folk). And still others I expect to pick up just because they pique my interest.

This new project builds on my "blog of record" since 2007, MapHead. I expect to be less active over there, but will try to restrict myself here specifically to this format, and reserve more general comment and exploration to that blog.

Thank you for reading this blog. And thank you for trying to be clear about what you and your fellow humans say.

2 comments:

  1. Hey, Nat, looking forward to it. I'm a big fan of clarity in language, though it's awfully hard to achieve. If you are considering nominations for words, I submit one of the most fundamental and slippery: truth.

    Particularly in religious contexts I often hear this word, sometimes capitalized, meaning something I don't really understand but obviously quite different from my own mundane sense of truth as "that which is the case."

    ReplyDelete

Thanks for contributing. I post pretty much anything that isn't spam, though I reserve the right to figure out something else to do with comments that are utterly off-topic.