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|    rec.music.dylan    |    Dylan's great, if you can understand him    |    103,360 messages    |
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|    Message 103,003 of 103,360    |
|    W.Dockery to General-Zod    |
|    Re: "Leonard Cohen and Bob Dylan : Poetr    |
|    16 Nov 24 23:00:40    |
      [continued from previous message]              >>> wife "with such a switch as the one he held in his hand" was within his       >>> matrimonial privilege.       >       >>> In the 18th century a judge named Francis Buller, dubbed "Judge Thumb"       >>> by       >>> the famous caricaturist James Gillray, was said to have allowed that a       >>> man       >>> could beat his wife, as long as the punitive stick was no thicker than       >>> his       >>> thumb. (A witty countess was said to have asked the judge to measure her       >>> husband's thumb exactly, so that she might know the precise extent of       >>> his       >>> privilege.)       >       >>> Fenick also found three 19th-century cases in America that mention the       >>> "rule       >>> of thumb," including an 1868 ruling in North Carolina that "the       >>> defendant       >>> had a right to whip his wife with a switch no larger than his thumb."       >       >>> Buller's "thumbstick" opinion and the three American rulings Fenick       >>> found       >>> were intriguing -- and damning -- but did not constitute definitive       >>> proof       >>> that the rule of thumb was derived from British common law.       >       >>> As Fenick, encouraged by a law professor, considered publishing her       >>> findings, she found that Henry Ansgar Kelly, a University of California       >>> English professor, had beaten her to the punch. His "Rule of Thumb and       >>> the       >>> Folklaw of the Husband's Stick" appeared in the September 1994 Journal       >>> of       >>> Legal Education.       >       >>> Kelly, much to Fenick's disappointment, had covered the same territory       >>> as       >>> she. (Although she proudly observes that his article overlooked the       >>> earliest       >>> reference to "rule of thumb" by Coghill.) Three and half years later,       >>> Safire       >>> would rely entirely on Kelly's article to make his case in his column.       >       >>> Fenick's efforts were not in vain, however. In response to a query from       >>> a       >>> correspondent to the alt.folkore.urban newsgroup linked to the Urban       >>> Legends       >>> Web site, Fenick posted her article where it is now part of the site's       >>> permanent archives. Since its inception, the site has expanded its       >>> mission       >>> from probing the genesis and spread of urban legends to "confirming or       >>> disproving beliefs and facts of all kinds, including origin of       >>> vernacular."       >       >>> "Rule of thumb" and other figures of speech can work much the same way       >>> that       >>> urban legends do: They may appear mysteriously, spread spontaneously and       >>> contain elements of humor or horror. And, like urban legends, a figure       >>> of       >>> speech may contain a grain of emotional, if not actual, truth.       >       >>> Thus it was easy at first for Fenick and others to believe that the       >>> "rule of       >>> thumb" was founded in common law. Patricia A. Turner, a University of       >>> California at Davis folklorist, well understands how a falsehood can       >>> acquire       >>> the mantle of truth.       >       >>> In "I Heard it Through the Grapevine: Rumor in African-American       >>> Culture,"       >>> Turner examines the way allegations of forced birth control, corporate       >>> collusion with the Ku Klux Klan, drug distribution targeted at urban       >>> areas       >>> and other anti-black conspiracy theories circulating in the       >>> African-American       >>> community are based on racist realities and serve as a form of       >>> resistance       >>> against white oppression.       >       >>> The same theory can be applied to the rule of thumb, Turner says. A text       >>> may       >>> be proved to be inaccurate or false, but "if it reflects some deeper       >>> truth       >>> in society, it doesn't go away." The term "rule of thumb" may "not have       >>> that       >>> specific etymological origin, but men have dominated women in workplaces       >>> and       >>> in homes and in virtually every setting. It speaks to a deeper truth."       >       >>> Students of women's history who want to research possibly apocryphal       >>> ideas       >>> are also at a disadvantage because they "don't have the paper trail that       >>> more mainstream areas of academic discipline have," Turner says.       >>> "Sometimes       >>> it's more difficult to get to the bottom of something."       >       >>> That said, Turner acknowledges that it is "very sloppy for an academic       >>> to       >>> pass on misinformation." Once a theory such as the inaccurate history of       >>> the       >>> "rule of thumb" has been debunked, it can backfire on those promoting       >>> it,       >>> she says. "If someone has read it who knows it is false, everything gets       >>> discredited on that level. So based on one falsehood, a whole history       >>> can be       >>> challenged."       >       >>> That is what concerned scholars and social critics say happened when       >>> Christina Hoff Sommers debunked the "rule of thumb" in her 1994 book,       >>> "Who       >>> Stole Feminism? How Women have Betrayed Women." Sommers finds the       >>> earliest       >>> misuse of the phrase in a 1976 National Organization for Women report       >>> and       >>> uses it to bolster her case against domestic-violence statistics.       >       >>> The feminist rush to brandish the "rule of thumb" as justification for       >>> their       >>> crusade, Turner suggests, may inadvertently have provided Sommers and       >>> her       >>> sympathizers with the ideal ammunition to discredit the same cause.       >       >>> As for Fenick, she received a nice letter from Kelly, who learned RTC of       >>> her       >>> research after the Safire piece ran. She has written him back, and hopes       >>> to       >>> hear soon what he thinks about her Coghill reference.       >       >>> Pub Date: 4/17/98       >       >>> Found in my drafts file, worth archiving.       >       >       > *************************************************************              Thanks again for reading and commenting.              --- SoupGate-DOS v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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