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Taunting

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"Taunting with Smoke from a Pipe" by Thomas Rowlandson, 1823

A taunt is a battle cry, sarcastic remark, gesture, or insult intended to demoralize or antagonize the recipient.[1] Taunting can exist as a form of social competition to gain control of the target's cultural capital (i.e., status).[2] In sociological theory, the control of the three social capitals is used to produce an advantage in the social hierarchy, to enforce one's position in relation to others. Taunting is committed by either directly or indirectly encouraging others to taunt the target. The target may give a response in kind to maintain status, as in fighting words and trash-talk.

Taunts are also a genre of folklore according to "The Poetic Rites of Conversation," by John H. McDowell, published in the Journal of Folklore Research.[3]

Verbal taunts

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The act of taunting can be learned by observation and improvisation. It usually follows linear thought, correlating or building in some manner to the target of taunting. Things such as the victim's appearance, intelligence, mannerisms, education, background, past offenses, etc. can otherwise be insulted. When used in this manner, the effectiveness of a taunt at provoking a response varies depending on how the specific insult relates to its victim (or their sense of self), to what level of offense they regard the taunt, and how well the victim can control their emotions when responding.

In the Eastern U.S. and modern Britain the chant "Nyah nyah nyah nyah nyah nyah", sung to the tune of "Bye, baby Bunting" is insult among children.[4] In the American South this is often used as "Nanny nanny boo-boo" and repeated with words such as "You ca-an't catch me". In Hebrew, the taunt is "Na na, banana" or "Na-na-na banana" (means the same as in English). In French, the taunt uses syllables often rendered "Nananananère," and Swedish-speaking children use the phrase "Du kan inte ta mig" ("You cannot catch me").[5]

Gestures

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Certain movements of one's body are, in many cultures, interpreted as a taunt. These can be expressed through the eyes, hands, fingers, head and other areas of the body.

Akanbe

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A gesture in Japanese culture, made by pulling a lower eyelid down to expose the red underneath.

Clenched fist

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A raised, clenched fist is used as a gesture of defiance by a number of groups. It is usually considered to be hostile, yet without any sexual, scatological, or notionally offensive connotations. It is believed to have originally been used in the early 20th century as popular democratic symbol.[6]

Crotch-grab

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The crotch-grab is done almost exclusively by males. It is, as the name suggests, a grabbing (or one-handed cupping and lifting) of the penis and testicles - usually through clothing. In Italy the sign is by no means purely a taunt, being also an apotropaic gesture of considerable antiquity employed, since the days of Ancient Rome, to ward off the evil eye or bad luck and also to attract good luck. It is, in this context, an invocation of the benign powers of fertility embodied in the male genitalia and, as such, lies at the root of the magical intent expressed symbolically in the fascinum and probably also the cornicello. Despite recent rulings by the Italian legal system, the (public) crotch-grab is still used by some Italian men as a means of deflecting the ill-luck threatened by objects or people related to death and burial and (more esoterically) the unlucky number 17 (said to be unlucky because it a) resembles a man hanging from a gibbet and b) because when written XVII in Roman numerals is an anagram of 'vixi' - 'I lived', a verb form considered unlucky because of its frequent occurrence in ancient Roman funerary inscriptions).[7][8]

Cutthroat

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The cutthroat gesture is performed by drawing the hand, or a finger or two, across the throat. It represents slitting the throat with a knife, and means that the gesturer or someone else is metaphorically being killed. It is rarely if ever used literally to refer to death (and when the whole hand is used, it is usually a benign signal to stop or pause something), though it is occasionally used as a theatrical threat ("I'm going to kill you"). The gesture earned a great deal of national notoriety in the NFL during the 1999 season in which several players did the cutthroat gesture.[9]

Middle finger

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"The finger" gesture

The finger gesture is a gesture consisting of a fist with the middle finger extended, optionally extending the thumb as well. It is equivalent to the phrase "fuck you" due to its resemblance to the penis.[10] It is certainly thousands of years old, being referred to in Ancient Roman literature as the digitus infamis or digitus impudicus.[10][11] Performing this gesture is also named "flipping the bird" in countries where it is used. In other regions, "flipping the bird" refers to the raising of the middle and index finger with the back of the hand directed at the recipient. It can also mean "Victor" in some countries, which is not to be mistaken for the "Peace" gesture. The "Peace" gesture is done with the palm facing the recipient of the gesture. In Britain, this is also the case; however, if the palm faces inwards (towards the person doing the "peace" sign), it is an offensive gesture in Britain, though not considered quite as rude as "the middle finger".[12]

Loser

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Child making the loser gesture

The "loser" gesture used in some countries is performed by raising the index finger and thumb of one's right hand perpendicular to each other and then placing them on one's forehead with index finger pointing upward.[13] So placed, the fingers form the letter "L" from the perspective of a viewer and signify the name-calling insult "loser" directed toward the person being spoken to or spoken about. The gesture can also be performed as a dance of sorts by placing the "L" shape on your head, grabbing your crotch, and hopping from one foot to another. This gesture was created in early 2018 as a purchasable emote "Take the L" in the video game Fortnite. It became such a problem that Epic Games, the creators of Fortnite, were forced to add a setting to "disable confrontational emotes" in April 2024.[14]

Shocker

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Done by holding up the hand with the index, middle and pinky finger, implying the act of putting two fingers in a woman's vagina and one in her anus.

Tongue

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Often sticking one's tongue out at another is seen as mocking the other. A variation of this is also known as blowing a raspberry. It can also be wagged in a manner suggesting cunnilingus, which is usually seen as highly vulgar.

Turkey face

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The turkey face gesture is when you take your hand and put your thumb on your nose, wriggle your head back and forth and do the same thing with the hand. Cocking a snook is an old British taunting gesture in which the thumb of one hand is on the nose and the extended fingers are wiggled.

V sign

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The V sign

The insulting version of the gesture (with the palm inwards) is often compared to the offensive gesture known as "the finger". The "two-fingered salute", as it is also known, is commonly performed by flicking the V upwards from wrist or elbow. The V sign, when the palm is facing toward the person giving the sign, has long been an insulting gesture in England,[12] and later in the rest of the United Kingdom; its use is largely restricted to the UK, Ireland, Australia, and New Zealand.[15] It is frequently used to signify defiance (especially to authority), contempt or derision.[16]

Wanker

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The Wanker gesture

The wanker gesture is made with a loose fist (with all fingers forming a cylindrical shape), and shaken up and down (or sometimes, back and forth) at the wrist, suggesting masturbation. A picture of the young Tony Blair, later the British Prime Minister (1997–2007), using the wanker gesture became widely available (although copyrighted) in 2007.[17]

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In the 1975 Monty Python film Monty Python and the Holy Grail, the French Knight taunts King Arthur and his companions with a series of increasingly ludicrous insults, culminating in "Your mother was a hamster and your father smelt of elderberries".[18]

Versions of the Endemol quiz show 1 vs. 100 based on the United States version (Australia, and to an extent, France) are known for the contestants and mob taunting each other.

Similar game shows, such as Weakest Link, are built on taunting a defeated player.

Video games

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Some video games feature the ability to taunt an opponent. In the context of role-playing games, a "taunt" command is often used by the tank to draw the AI opponents' attention to the player's character. In a first-person shooter context or 1-on-1 games, a "taunt" command is essentially a virtual incarnation of a verbal taunt, and may include either purpose-programmed sounds and gestures or a symbolic ritual insult that players have adopted to show dominance.[19] In games not featuring a dedicated "taunt" command, players have devised other ways, using the controls of the game, to taunt or harass opponents of other skill levels. Multiplayer FPS games have given rise to the practice of corpse humping or tea bagging, which involves repeating the "crouch" command present in a typical FPS's control scheme above the dead player's body. In FPS games which allow hand-to-hand attacks, another common way of taunting opponents is to kill an opponent while one is not armed with a gun.

In the MMORPG World of Warcraft, the classes of Warrior and Druid have the ability named "Taunt" and "Growl" respectively[20] and used to focus the attack of an enemy non-player character (NPC) onto the Warrior or Druid who have used this ability.

In the Super Smash Bros. series, taunting has been a part of the games since the original Super Smash Bros. on the Nintendo 64. While most taunts are purely visual, a few characters have taunts that deal damage, such as Luigi. Hitting an opponent with a taunt that deals damage is typically seen as a form of disrespect or trolling.[21]

In The Secret of Monkey Island, the main character learns taunts and retorts in a process called insult sword fighting. The learned retorts are used to counter a second set of taunts later. The sequels feature several similar insult games.[22]

In the EA Sports UFC series, taunting is a part of the in-game fight mechanics. Players can use taunts to mock or provoke their opponents, adding a psychological layer to the combat. The taunt animations in the game often replicate real-life gestures and moves performed by actual UFC fighters during their matches.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Keltner, Dacher; Capps, Lisa; Kring, Ann M.; Young, Randall C.; Heerey, Erin A. (March 2001). "Just teasing: A conceptual analysis and empirical review". Psychological Bulletin. 127 (2): 229–248. doi:10.1037/0033-2909.127.2.229. PMID 11316012.
  2. ^ Throsby, David (1999-03-01). "Cultural Capital". Journal of Cultural Economics. 23 (1): 3–12. doi:10.1023/A:1007543313370. ISSN 1573-6997.
  3. ^ McDowell, John (May–December 1985). "The Poetic Rites of Conversation". Journal of Folklore Research. 22 (2/3): 120 – via JSTOR.
  4. ^ D. Albright, Untwisting the serpent: modernism in music, literature, and other arts, . Daniel . University of Chicago Press, 2000. p. 94.
  5. ^ "AIMLExchange Search". www.aimlexchange.com. Retrieved 2024-08-19.
  6. ^ poweredbyreason.co.uk, Powered By Reason-. "The raised fist: a history of the symbol". People's History Museum. Retrieved 2024-09-15.
  7. ^ Lapidos, Juliet (4 March 2008). "Can't Touch This". Slate.
  8. ^ Moore, Malcolm (29 February 2008). "Italian court outlaws touching of genitals". The Daily Telegraph.
  9. ^ Freeman, Mike (23 November 1999). "PRO FOOTBALL; Throat Gesture Faces Ban By N.F.L." The New York Times. Retrieved 15 September 2024.
  10. ^ a b Martínez, Antonio Marco (2014-05-20). ""Digitus impudicus", "the impudent finger"". History of Greece and Rome. Retrieved 2024-09-18.
  11. ^ Nasaw, Daniel (2012-02-06). "When did the middle finger become offensive?". BBC News. Retrieved 2024-08-02.
  12. ^ a b Staff Henry V Archived 2008-06-07 at the Wayback Machine, British Shakespeare Company, accessed 23 April 2008.
  13. ^ Armstrong, Nancy (2003). Field guide to gestures : how to identify and interpret virtually every gesture known to man. Internet Archive. Philadelphia, Pa. : Quirk. ISBN 978-1-931686-20-4.
  14. ^ Andy Chalk (2024-04-22). "Fortnite is adding a toggle to disable 'confrontational emotes' including Laugh it Up and Take the L". PC Gamer. Retrieved 2024-09-15.
  15. ^ V sign as an insult:
  16. ^ Defiance, contempt or derision:
  17. ^ "Blair photo 'shows rude gesture'". 2007-03-02. Retrieved 2024-08-29.
  18. ^ Jones, T., & Gilliam, T. (1975). Monty Python and the Holy Grail. Cinema 5 Distributing.
  19. ^ Bow, Nigger Archived 2008-11-06 at the Wayback Machine - an essay on gaming culture
  20. ^ "Growl".
  21. ^ Writer, Phillip Martinez (2018-12-11). "How to Taunt Your Opponent in 'Smash Ultimate'". Newsweek. Retrieved 2024-05-14.
  22. ^ "Monkey Island creators recount the origins of Insult Sword Fighting | GamesRadar+". web.archive.org. 2024-08-22. Retrieved 2024-10-02.