The rise in using swear words has increased in the literature of American society and shows that they have become individualistic and value free expression.
The use of swear words has increased over time, which shows the evolving American psyche, reveals a new study by San Diego State University psychology professor Jean M. Twenge. Comedian George Carlin's 1972 routine "the seven words you can never say on television" underlined his generation's rejection of the niceties and constraints of post-war American society.
‘Over the years, using swear words has become more prominent and has become a way of being individualistic and valuing free expression.’
"The increases in swear words in books is part of a larger cultural trend toward individualism and free expression," said Twenge, also the author of the book, Generation Me.For the study, Twenge, along with SDSU graduate student Hannah VanLandingham and University of Georgia psychologist W. Keith Campbell, analyzed the textual content from tens of thousands of books published between 1950 and 2008, and that have been catalogued by the Google Books database.
Within this corpus, they searched for instances of Carlin's seven notorious words (which we won't print here but are noted in the study, or can be easily found online).
They found a steadily rising trend of those words appearing in the books, the team reports in the journal SAGE Open. In total, American authors used the seven risqué words 28 times more often in the mid-2000s than the early 1950s, the study notes.
"Forty-five years after George Carlin's routine, you can say those words on television and in books," Twenge said.
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That dovetails with previous research which has found that American society is becoming increasingly individualistic. That characteristic is especially prominent in young people, Twenge said.
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Source-Eurekalert