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Swearing Is Good for You by Emma Byrne
Swearing Is Good for You by Emma  Byrne









Swearing Is Good for You by Emma Byrne

She included it because the perceptions people generally hold about people with the syndrome are linked directly with swearing, but really the two are tangentially related. There was also a chapter in the book covering Tourette's, which was subtitled "Why this chapter shouldn't be in this book," that I also found fascinating. Those words do not have much impact to English speakers, but to her they were the equivalent of calling someone a stupid shithead. They once documented her calling a macaque she didn't like "dirty monkey," which was Very Bad to her. She also developed slurs! She used the word "monkey" to refer to primates who couldn't sign. Washoe the chimpanzee developed a taboo around being dirty (related to excretion) and began using the word dirty as a way to demean or tease others. This was the most fascinating part of the book to me.

Swearing Is Good for You by Emma Byrne

We also learn that in other primates that learn language, they spontaneously develop swearing on their own.

Swearing Is Good for You by Emma Byrne Swearing Is Good for You by Emma Byrne

To overview an overview, we learn that: Swearing is a natural pain reliever, prevents violence in societies that use it (both human and animal), varies from culture to culture depending on the taboos of that culture, and is very often the only remnants of language in people with brain damage because our urge to swear comes from a different place in our brains. And Emma Byrne is a fun author! She swears while she's telling us about swearing and the history of studying swearing in neuroscience, psychology, animal studies, foreign languages, etc. But really it's just an overview of other people's science so as long as you know that going in, you'll have a good time. This is actually why I'm only giving it three and a half stars, because as always seems to be the case with these pop science books, I wanted more detail, more oomph. But this book does a really good job laying out a general overview of, as the title tells you, why swearing is good for you. I do not understand the fixation that some people have about swearing, and I probably never will. Any book that tries to break down the taboo veil surrounding swearing is good in my book. So firstly, this was fun and liked it and I admire its enthusiasm.











Swearing Is Good for You by Emma  Byrne