Taken for Granted: The Remarkable Power of the Unremarkable
English
By (author): Eviatar Zerubavel
How the words we useand dont usereinforce dominant cultural norms
Why is the term openly gay so widely used but openly straight is not? What are the unspoken assumptions behind terms like male nurse, working mom, and white trash? Offering a revealing and provocative look at the word choices we make every day without even realizing it, Taken for Granted exposes the subtly encoded ways we talk about race, gender, sexual orientation, religion, social status, and more.
In this engaging and insightful book, Eviatar Zerubavel describes how the words we usesuch as when we mark the best female basketball player but leave her male counterpart unmarkedprovide telling clues about the things many of us take for granted. By marking women's history or Black History Month, we are also reinforcing the apparent normality of the history of white men. When we mark something as being special or somehow noticeable, that which goes unmarkedsuch as maleness, whiteness, straightness, and able-bodiednessis assumed to be ordinary by default. Zerubavel shows how this tacit normalizing of certain identities, practices, and ideas helps to maintain their cultural dominanceincluding the power to dictate what others take for granted.
A little book about a very big idea, Taken for Granted draws our attention to what we implicitly assume to be normaland in the process unsettles the very notion of normality.