[F]ootball is to gridiron as baseball
is to: (a) court, (b) diamond, (c) pitch, (d) stadium
Martha C. Nussbaum
The
above is a typical question testing the ability to draw verbal analogies in the
US Army intelligence test or standardized university entrance test Scholastic
Aptitude Test (SAT) [1]. Prof. Nussbaum asks in the immediately following
sentence: “I wonder who in my Indian audience could get that one; and yet, this
is a highly intelligent audience!” She was not being condescending to the audience
as she was talking to the delegates at the “[C]onference on ‘Affirmative Action
in Higher Education in India, United States, and South Africa’ jointly
organized by the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) and the University of
Chicago.”
I
am going to shift gears and race ahead to another situation, quite removed from
admission tests. The company I work for recently took on the avatar as an MNC,
not quite a TNC. We have been seeing some white folks in the office corridors
and along with them come a host of Americanisms. The one that rankles me the most
is the response to a casual query, “How’re you?” It is always, repeat always, “I’m
good!”
Why
does this newfound phrase irritate me so much? Prof. Nussbaum comes to my
rescue. Referring to recent immigrants taking the Army intelligence test, she
says, “[O]ne had to know English well
(my emphasis) to take it, and also to have
some basic cultural knowledge (my emphasis).”
I
have a three part defense to my feeling of intense discomfort at, “I’m good!”
First,
the good professor had written, “know English well.” Why did she not write “know
English good”? After all, if “I’m good!” is OK, “know English good” should also
be, well, good. I am not here to give any lesson on English grammar, contexts
and native idioms, and the few people who do come to my space are supremely intelligent
(I am condescending towards myself!) to require any tutorial from me.
Two,
why this standard response? Earlier, when the company was an Indian company, it
used to be a variety of responses, each having its own shades, highly nuanced
and carrying more specific meanings suiting the context – Chalta hai or Bhalo (the
company was, and probably still is, dominantly Bengali) as distinct from OK, I guess, as distinct from Can't complain, to Fine, to Great. Now, it is like the row of
plastic smiles, of course with fault-free pearly whites, one sees on the stage
at a beauty pageant. That stops the show; no hint of the direction a
conversation could take. The situation has been formalized, been sterilized.
But,
the third reason is the most substantive. If the responder believes that I
would understand, “I’m good”, she (invariably it is a she because Indian men
are slow on the uptake!) must understand, “My bad!” I tried it out on about
half dozen female coworkers and, believe me, not one of them could understand
what I meant (I had ensured that the context of my use was appropriate). That
is, there was a lack of basic cultural knowledge.
How
I wish Prof. Nussbaum had made this clear to me more than twenty years ago,
when I had just recently returned after finishing my educational stint in the
US. When my mother ‘was seriously nitpicking (oxymoron?) on me, I blurted out, “’cuuuse
me for livin’!” apostrophes and all.
That
started her out, “I never asked you not to live,” and she was furious and also
inconsolably weepy, simultaneously. It took all my talents to pacify her and
ever since that day I had not, no matter how irritated I might be driven to be,
used that phrase to show my displeasure. Yet, now that my mother is dead and
the company has gone the MNC way, I am free to say, “’cuuuuse me for livin’!” (note
the additional ‘u’!) to my colleagues if the situation so warranted. Likewise
the phrase, “Shame on me!” used casually.
OK,
I am not arguing for Queen’s English (I wonder whether it will ever become,
again, King’s English and who that King would be). What I am pointing out is
when you do hear a native idiom, like “I’m good”, please do pause for a moment.
No, you do not have to parse it, just to reflect casually on the context. No,
not to criticize, only to make your mouthing the words more meaningful, with
varying tones, stress etc.
I
leave you with three such instances.
The
first one is a question in the verbal portion of GRE in December 1975. The
verbal analogy question went like
Horse is to man as a gelding is to:
(a) infant, (b) lame person, (c) eunuch, (d) woman
I
had no idea what a gelding was and had some idea of who a eunuch was. But what
is the analogy, where is it hidden? I did not have time to reflect. I am sure I
just threw a dart in the dark and landed on one option; right or wrong, I never
cared. So, it all boils down to my intelligence depending on the dart!
Why
did I not know what a gelding was? Because I was never exposed to a horse race.
When I was – after all I was in Lexington, Kentucky, the so-called thoroughbred
capital of the world – I could not but know what a gelding was. This is
cultural knowledge, gained over time, through fortuitous circumstances.
The
second and third are from the world of entertainment. Michael Jackson taunted us
with his super-duper “I’m bad!” while
Mae West enticed with the eternal li(n)e, “When I'm good I'm very good. But
when I'm bad (my emphasis) I'm
better.” I am not bold enough to throw that question to you, a la Prof. Nussbaum – do you know the
difference between the two, “I’m bad”s?
But,
do allow me to wonder how my many of my colleagues will understand the imports
of these lines, even as they use “I am good!” They have learnt the empty “I’m
good!” They have to try harder to make it less fluffy, even as a slang! Marinate
themselves in the basic cultural language of the environment they are in; learn
what, “I’m bad!” means, without being bad themselves!
Raghuram
Ekambaram
P.S.
Is it, “I know fully well …” or “I know full well …”?
References
1.
Equalizing
Access, Zoya Hassan & Martha C. Nussbaum, Oxford University Press, ISBN-10:
0-19-807505-7, p.81.
4 comments:
Language is a very dynamic thing. What was wrong yesterday may be right today, and what's right today may be wrong tomorrow. I'm good may even replace I'm fine or I'm well!
Yes, that is precisely the point ... one needs to understand that language changes. And, when it does in one's own time, why would anyone miss the chance of witnessing that change? This is what one would be doing if you merely go with the flow, take in the current fad.
How many know that in Victorian times, the word "skirt" was considered vulgar, not used in mixed company?
The cultural environment of language and language change - this is what I tried to harp on, thanks to the lead from Prof. Nussbaum.
By the way Matheikal, "I'm good" has already entered the company's linguistic canon.
RE
I have also been noticing ' I am good' since a year or two. When my daughter said this first few yers ago I tried to correct her. As you say, more and more people are using it now. I may not use it nwo but who knows ? another word which has gained lot of usage int he ast decde is awesome. The only word I knew at that time was awful.Awe was used for wonder in some poems
Thanks pala for feeling some disquiet as language use changes. If you don't it will be an uncontrolled process and that is another way a language could go extinct.
RE
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