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2006-12-18 17:33:26 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Etiquette

3 answers

Basic answer: it's racial/ethnic slur.

Here is a better definition from Wikepedia re: the term cracker:

Cracker (pejorative)

Cracker, sometimes "white cracker", is a usually pejorative term for a white person, mainly used in the Southern United States.[citation needed]

Usage

The term "cracker" was and is used most frequently in the southern U.S., especially in Georgia and Florida. [citation needed] Since the 1870s[citation needed], a nickname for Georgia is "The Cracker State".

Usage of the term "cracker" generally differs from "hick" and "hillbilly" because crackers reject or resist assimilation into the dominant culture, while hicks and hillbillies theoretically are isolated from the dominant culture. In this way, the cracker is similar to the redneck.[citation needed] In the African American community and other ethnically minority populations in the United States, "cracker" is a racist term for whites.

Since 1900 "cracker" has also been used as a proud or jocular self-description.[citation needed] With the huge influx of new residents from the North, "cracker" is now used informally by some white residents of Florida and Georgia ("Florida cracker" or "Georgia cracker") to indicate that their family has lived there for many generations.[citation needed] However, the term "white cracker" is not always used self-referentially and remains a racist term to many in the region.[1]

Etymology

There are various theories about the origin of the term "cracker."

The term cracker was in use during Elizabethan times to describe braggarts. The original root of this is the Middle English word crack1 meaning "entertaining conversation" (One may be said to "'crack' a joke"); this term and the alternate spelling "craic" are still in use in Ireland and Scotland. [citation needed]It is documented in Shakespeare's King John (1595): "What cracker is this . . . that deafes our ears / With this abundance of superfluous breath?"

By the 1760s, this term was in use by the English in the British North American colonies to refer to Scots-Irish settlers in the south. A letter to the Earl of Dartmouth reads: "I should explain to your Lordship what is meant by Crackers; a name they have got from being great boasters; they are a lawless set of rascalls on the frontiers of Virginia, Maryland, the Carolinas, and Georgia, who often change their places of abode." A similar usage was that of Charles Darwin in The Origin of Species, to refer to "Virginia squatters" (illegal settlers) (p. 35).

Historically the word suggested poor, white rural Americans with little formal education. [citation needed]Historians point out the term originally referred to the strong Scots-Irish of the backcountry (as opposed to the English of the seacoast). Thus a sociologist reported in 1926, "As the plantations expanded these freed men (formerly bond servants) were pushed further and further back upon the more and more sterile soil. They became 'pinelanders,' 'corn-crackers,' or 'crackers.'" [Kephard Highlanders] Frederick Law Olmsted, a prominent landscape architect from the northern United States, visited the South as a journalist in the 1850s and noted that some crackers "owned a good many negroes, and were by no means so poor as their appearance indicated." [McWhiney xvi]

Other possible origins of the term "cracker" are linked to early Florida cattle herders that traditionally used whips to herd wild Spanish cattle.[citation needed] The crack of the herders' whips could be heard for great distances and were used to round cattle in pens and to keep the cows on a given track. Also, "cracker" has historically been used to refer to those engaged in the low paying job of cracking pecans and other nuts in Georgia and throughout the southeast U.S.[citation needed]

Examples of Usage

The Florida Cracker Trail is a route posted across southern Florida by the Florida Department of Transportation.

The rustic lives of crackers[citation needed] were the topic of the novels of Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings.

Crackin' Good Snacks (a division of Winn Dixie, a Southern grocery chain) has sold crackers similar to Ritz crackers under the name "Georgia Crackers". They sometimes came in a red tin with a picture of "The Crescent", an antebellum plantation house in Valdosta, Georgia.

Before the Milwaukee Braves baseball team moved to Atlanta, the Atlanta minor league baseball team was known as the "Atlanta Crackers." The team existed under this name from 1901 until 1965. They were members of the Southern Association from their inception until 1961, and members of the International League from 1961 until they were moved to Richmond, Virginia in 1965. However, it is suggested the name was derived from players "cracking" the baseball bat and this origin makes sense when considering the Atlanta ***** League Baseball team was known as the "Atlanta Black Crackers." [citation needed]

Popular culture

When used in pop culture, the term "white cracker" or "cracker" is sometimes intended to be humorous, though the distinction is not always clear.

A puppet named "Colonel Crackie" played the stereotypical Southern gentleman in the children's television show Kukla, Fran and Ollie which aired on NBC from the late 1940s to the late 1950s. [citation needed]Curtis Mayfield uses the word "crackers" twice in his cautionary anti-racist anthem "If There's A Hell Below (We're All Going To Go)" - once in the opening spoken introduction ("*******, whiteys, jews, crackers/If there's a hell below...") and once in the first verse ("Blacks and the crackers, police and their backers.")

The song "Louisiana 1927," written by Randy Newman, tells the story, in the second verse, of President Calvin Coolidge visiting flood-stricken rural parts of Louisiana by train with a "little fat man." (Herbert Hoover) The lyrics portray Coolidge noting to Hoover the damage that the flooded river did to "this poor cracker's land." Aaron Neville notably changes the lyric to "poor people's land" when he performs it.

In John Boorman's 1972 film Deliverance, Lewis, played by Burt Reynolds, derisively refers to the rural people they encounter as being "crackers," implying that they were slow-witted hillbillies who lived in a world much different from that of him and his friends from a southern city. [citation needed]

In the 1984 movie "Tank" starring James Garner, the white, southern sheriff was derisively referred to as a "cracker" multiple times.

In the 2000 film O Brother Where Art Thou?, the upper class white character "Pappy" O'Daniel, candidate for the Governor of Mississippi and host of the radio show "Flour Hour", meets a lower class and uneducated white character as he arrives at the radio station for his program. Pappy is told that he can make $10 for singing into a can inside, whereupon he snaps, "I'm not here to make a record, you dumb cracker."

Politics

The Cracker Party was an active political party involved in city politics in Augusta, Georgia up until the early 1940's. [2]

In August 2006, California state Senator Don Perata referred to San Diego-area opponents of a bill allowing illegal immigrants to obtain drivers licenses as "crackers." [3].

References

* Roger Lyle Brown. Ghost Dancing on the Cracker Circuit: The Culture Festivals in the American South (1997).
* Cassidy, Frederic G. Dictionary of American Regional English. Harvard University Press, Vol. I, 1985: 825-26.
* "De Graffenried, Clare. "The Georgia Cracker in the Cotton Mills." Century 41 (February 1891): 483—98.
* George Gillett Keen and Sarah Pamela Williams. Cracker Times and Pioneer Lives: The Florida Reminiscences of George Gillett Keen and Sarah Pamela Williams edited by James M Denham and Canter Brown. U of South Carolina Press 2000/
* Grady McWhiney, Cracker Culture: Celtic Ways in the Old South (Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1988).
* John Solomon Otto, "Cracker: The History of a Southeastern Ethnic, Economic, and Racial Epithet," Names' 35 (1987): 28-39.
* Frank L. Owsley. Plain Folk of the Old South (1949)
* Delma E. Presley, "The Crackers of Georgia," Georgia Historical Quarterly 60 (summer 1976): 102-16.
* Burke, Karanja. "Cracker".

See also

* Hillbilly
* Honky
* Redneck
* List of ethnic slurs
* List of pejorative political slogans
* Trailer park trash
* White trash

External links

* Cracker – Entry in the New Georgia Encyclopedia
* Etymology of "cracker" by Professor Kim Pearson
* Florida Cracker Trail Association

Footnotes

* Note 1: The word "craic" was in itself, adopted into modern Irish Gaelic from the word crack.[citation needed]


I hope that helped you!

:-)

2006-12-19 01:57:03 · answer #1 · answered by whadda-dingo-gal 6 · 1 0

What's wrong with Cracker? They make our lives and festivals enjoyable. We in India light a lots of crackers on Diwali Day. I really like crackers.

2016-05-23 06:28:26 · answer #2 · answered by Cheryl 4 · 0 1

Dear, I think they are just calling you "cracker." Most black people don't go around calling white people "cracker", just those the term might apply to.

2006-12-19 04:27:17 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

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