“If I Could Walk That Way, I Wouldn't Need the Talcum Powder” Word Play Humor inM*A*S*H

1983 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 42-52
Author(s):  
Corrine Holt Sawyer
Keyword(s):  
2019 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 219-237
Author(s):  
Jennifer Ford

For generations, alphabet books have been widely used by parents, librarians and teachers as early literacy tools for young children. Through images, word play and the interactions between word and image, alphabet books have the effect of introducing preliterate young children to the names, images, symbols and concepts regarding animals, what Matthew Calarco has called ‘symbolic mechanisms’ of animals—names, images, concepts, cultural associations of animals—yet they can also be deconstructive of those same mechanisms. Derrida's insights into the contradictory logic of the supplement and parergon as well as the ‘destabilising synergies of word and image’ offer deconstructive readings of alphabet books for adult and child readers. Recognising what Derrida calls the ‘childlike’ in texts such as alphabet books creates unique polymorphous spaces for the further interrogation of notions of animals.


Medium Ævum ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 82 (2) ◽  
pp. 314 ◽  
Author(s):  
EVAN
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
pp. 194084472110027
Author(s):  
Kurt Borchard

I present four poems written in response to the U.S. Capitol insurrection. The poems are constructed through fragments of contemporary phrases, words from national anthems and pledges, and word play through spelling, phonetics, and semantics. They produce discordant, emergent sense-making through free form verse composed during a singular crisis of political legitimacy.


2021 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 130-143
Author(s):  
Werner Schäfer

Abstract This article deals with a linguistic phenomenon of increasing presence in everyday life which has found little attention in linguistic studies: humorous shop signs in German, shop signs involving word play. This article locates such shop signs within the study of linguistic landscapes, to which they belong but in which they have so far played no more than a minor role, the academic discussion of linguistic landscapes generally focussing on the function of linguistic phenomena in everyday life, above all the function of different languages in bilingual contexts. This article, in contrast, besides the function, examines the specific linguistic form of such shop signs, the syntactic, morphological and lexical particularities of German which allow such wordplay. The article closes with some didactic considerations regarding the exploitation of such shop signs in language tuition.


1952 ◽  
Vol 98 (411) ◽  
pp. 330-333 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joan FitzHerbert

In a paper published in the Journal of Mental Science for July, 1950, I suggested that head-banging originated in the infant's desire to reproduce the thrust of the mother's apex-beat against his head while he was being nursed on her left arm, either as a means of self-comfort or in retaliation for what he had felt to be an attack or as both combined. In the present paper I propose to analyse this infantile experience further, and to trace to some of its component elements certain other peculiarities of childish behaviour.I shall begin by considering the case of a bottle-fed baby, that is to say, one who at every feed is held in his mother's left arm with his right temple against her left breast (and I shall suppose that the mother is not herself a case of dextrocardia.) In addition to the teat in his mouth and the milk being swallowed, such an infant feels the thrust of the mother's apex as a series of taps against his head which tend to impart to the latter a rolling side-to-side movement, he hears her heart-beat as a rhythmic lub-dup, he feels the rise and fall of her chest in respiration as a slower to and fro rocking of his whole body, and he hears the sighing rustle of her breathing beneath his ear. The sound and thrust of the heart-beat are of course louder and stronger at the limit of the mother's expirations, and indeed the tap of the apex may be felt only then. In other words, the suckling hears two separate series of interwoven unsynchronized rhythmic sounds continuing throughout the whole of his feeding times. In addition to all this, he feels the warmth of the maternal body, the steady clasp of the mother's arm, he smells the milk and the woman's body odour (sweaty, or scented by her soap and talcum powder), and lastly, he feels (and may smell) her breath as an intermittent warm breeze on his face and in his hair. The mother seldom speaks while she is feeding her baby, and the room is often quiet, mother and child being alone together. A breast-fed baby also feels smooth warm skin under his fingers, but he has the mother's heart against his head, during only half his feeding times.The other occasions on which a woman commonly holds a child firmly against her breast are, of course, when she is trying to comfort a crying baby, or to restrain a struggling toddler from escaping to some forbidden activity. Here the child is angry and the mother herself often either anxious or angry or both, so that her heartbeat is greatly increased in force, and the furious infant feels it as a series of aggressive blows on his head, each of which is accompanied by a bumping noise.


2014 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 167-175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liu Wenlei ◽  
Zhao Shanlin ◽  
Cui Shuang ◽  
Zhang Jinhui ◽  
Li Ping ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

1990 ◽  
Vol 85 (3) ◽  
pp. 715
Author(s):  
Ian F. A. Bell ◽  
Eleanor Cook
Keyword(s):  

2011 ◽  
Vol 261-263 ◽  
pp. 1679-1684
Author(s):  
Xiao Ling Liu ◽  
Shi Mei Wang ◽  
Yun Zhi Tan ◽  
Xin Jiang Hu ◽  
Dai Peng Zhao

The choice of similar materials and the design of mix proportions is a key step in landslide model test. On the basis of experiment, we conduct a research for the similar materials which may sufficing volume weight, cohesive force, angle of internal friction, deformation modulus, and the infiltration coefficient on the same time. Then we put forward two kinds of schemes: one is the mixed material of high-strength glass micro beads and talcum powder; the other is the mixed material of lead beads, river sands, rubber powder and talcum powder. By analyzing the result of mix proportions test, We concluded the regularity that similar index varies along with different content of the similar material ingredients and found the notable influence factors , which provides important reference for the components of similar materials in the landslide model test.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document