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Original scientific paper

The Proverbial and Psychological Meanings of “Who’s Your Daddy?”

Simon J. Bronner


Full text: english pdf 996 Kb

page 109-132

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Abstract

At the end of the twentieth-century and early twenty-first century, “Who’s Your Daddy?” spontaneously chanted by large crowds at sporting events in the United States drew national press attention. Journalists usually reported the ritualized chanting of the question being of recent origin, but differed over whether it was meant to be offensive or endearing. In this essay, I use linguistic, paremiological, historical, folkloristic, and ethnographic research to show that the phrase could be considered a “proverbial interrogative” indicating social dominance associated with patriarchy and probably dates to the American frontier experience in the mid-nineteenth century. Through the twentieth century, it became associated with African-American street culture and the “beat scene,” often with sexual connotations. In its latest iteration, I argue with reference to “frame theory” that the frame of sports allowed for psycho-logical projection in this and other folk sayings of anxieties about declining power of men in a feminizing American society.

Keywords

African-American; Barack Obama; basketball; blues; Bob Knight; catchphrase; frame theory; frontier; Hoosier; interrogative; masculinity; psychology; sports; patriarchy; politics; weightlifting

Hrčak ID:

278361

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/278361

Publication date:

31.8.2014.

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