Throw shade
{{Short description|Term for insulting a person}}
{{Distinguish|text=Throwing Shade, the podcast}}
The expressions "throw shade", "throwing shade", or simply "shade", are slang terms for a certain type of insult, often nonverbal. Journalist Anna Holmes called shade "the art of the sidelong insult".{{cite news|last=Holmes|first=Anna|author-link=Anna Holmes|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/17/magazine/the-underground-art-of-the-insult.html|title=The Underground Art of the Insult|newspaper=The New York Times|date=14 May 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150516052933/https://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/17/magazine/the-underground-art-of-the-insult.html|archive-date=16 May 2015|url-status=live}} Merriam-Webster defines it as "subtle, sneering expression of contempt for or disgust with someone—sometimes verbal, and sometimes not".{{cite web|url=http://www.merriam-webster.com/words-at-play/shade |title=What Does 'Throw Shade' Mean? |publisher=Merriam-Webster |access-date=2016-06-02}}
History
The term can be found in Jane Austen's novel Mansfield Park (1814). Young Edmund Bertram is displeased with a dinner guest's disparagement of the uncle who took her in: "With such warm feelings and lively spirits it must be difficult to do justice to her affection for Mrs. Crawford, without throwing a shade on the Admiral."{{cite book |last1=Austen |first1=Jane |author-link=Jane Austen |title=Mansfield Park |date=1814 |publisher=Thomas Egerton |location=London |page=[https://archive.org/details/mansfieldparknov01aust/page/130 130]}}
According to gender studies scholar John C. Hawley, the expression "throwing shade" was used in the 1980s by New York City's working-class in the "ballroom and vogue culture". He writes that it refers to "the processes of a publicly performed dissimulation that aims either to protect oneself from ridicule or to verbally or psychologically attack others in a haughty or derogatory manner."{{cite book |last1=Hawley |first1=John C. |title=LGBTQ America Today: An Encyclopedia, Volume 1 |date=2008 |publisher=Greenwood Press |location=New York |pages=1201–1202}}
Later use
The first major use of "shade" that introduced the slang to the greater public was in Jennie Livingston's documentary film, Paris Is Burning (1990), about the mid-1980s drag scene in Manhattan. In the documentary, one of the drag queens, Dorian Corey, explains that shade derives from "reading", the "real art form of insults". Shade is a developed form of reading: "Shade is, I don't tell you you're ugly. But I don't have to tell you, because you know you're ugly. And that's shade."Corey, Dorian (1990). Interview in Jennie Livingston, Paris Is Burning.{{pb}}
{{cite news |last=Brown |first=Kara |date=17 December 2014 |title=Shade Court Is in Session |work=Jezebel |url=http://jezebel.com/shade-court-is-in-session-1647145347}}{{pb}}
{{cite news |last1=Lopez |first1=Linette |author-link=Linette Lopez |date=4 May 2015 |title=This is where the expression 'throw shade' comes from |work=Business Insider |url=https://www.businessinsider.com/where-the-expression-throw-shade-comes-from-2015-3}}
Willi Ninja, who also appeared in Paris Is Burning, described "shade" in 1994 as a "nonverbal response to verbal or nonverbal abuse. Shade is about using certain mannerisms in battle. If you said something nasty to me, I would just turn on you, and give you a look like: 'Bitch please, you're not even worth my time, go on.' ... It's like watching Joan Collins going against Linda Evans on Dynasty. ... Or when George Bush ran against Bill Clinton, they were throwing shade. Who got the bigger shade? Bush did because Clinton won."{{cite book |last1=Rose |first1=Tricia |author-link1=Tricia Rose |editor1-last=Ross |editor1-first=Andrew |editor2-last=Rose |editor2-first=Tricia |title=Microphone Fiends: Youth Music & Youth Culture |url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780415909082 |url-access=registration |date=1994 |publisher=Routledge |location=New York and London |page=[https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780415909082/page/174 174] |chapter=Nobody Wants a Part-Time Mother: An Interview with Willi Ninja}} A New York Times letter to the editor in 1993 criticized the newspaper for commenting on Bill Clinton's hair: "The Sunday Stylers are the last people I'd expect to throw shade on President Bill's hair pursuits."{{cite news |last1=Goodwin |first1=Barbara S. |title=A Hair-Driven Administration |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1993/07/04/style/l-a-hair-driven-administration-451793.html |work=The New York Times |date=4 July 1993}}
According to E. Patrick Johnson, to throw shade is to ignore someone: "If a shade thrower wishes to acknowledge the presence of the third party, he or she might roll his or her eyes and neck while poking out his or her lips. People throw shade if they do not like a particular person or if that person has dissed them in the past. ... In the playful mode, however, a person may throw shade at a person with whom he or she is a best friend."{{cite book |last1=Johnson |first1=E. Patrick |author-link1=E. Patrick Johnson |editor1-last=Auslander |editor1-first=Philip |title=Performance: Critical Concepts in Literary and Cultural Studies, Volume III |date=2003 |publisher=Routledge |location=Abingdon and New York |pages=178–179 |chapter=SNAP! Culture: a different kind of 'reading'}}
The expression was further popularized by the American reality television series RuPaul's Drag Race, which premiered in 2009. In 2015, Anna Holmes of The New York Times Magazine wrote: {{Quote|Shade can take many forms — a hard, deep look that could be either aggressive or searching, a compliment that could be interpreted as the opposite of one. E. Patrick Johnson, who teaches performance studies and African-American studies at Northwestern University, and who has written about the tradition of insults in the gay and black communities, explains: "If someone walks into a room with a hideous dress, but you don’t want to say it's hideous, you might say, 'Oooh … look at you!{{'"}} At its most refined, shade should have an element of plausible deniability, so that the shade-thrower can pretend that he or she didn't actually mean to behave with incivility, making it all the more delicious.}}
See also
{{Portal|LGBTQ}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{wikt|throw shade}}
- {{cite web|url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/darnell-l-moore/tongues-untied-shade-culture----throwing-shade-reflecting-light_b_2945321.html|title=Tongues Untied: Shade Culture — Throwing Shade, Reflecting Light|date=March 29, 2013|work=The Huffington Post|first=Darnell L.|last=Moore}}
- {{cite web|url=https://mic.com/articles/141939/merriam-webster-threw-shade-at-people-who-don-t-know-the-word-genderqueer#.KtvUwUC6w|title=Merriam-Webster Threw Shade at People Who Don't Know the Word Genderqueer|website=Mic.com|first=Mathew|last=Rodriguez|date=April 27, 2016}}
- {{cite web|author=Katy Steinmetz |url=https://time.com/3109043/oxford-dictionaries-adds-hot-mess-side-boob-throw-shade/ |title=Oxford Dictionary Additions: Hot Mess, Side Boob, Throw Shade |website=Time |date=13 August 2014 |access-date=2016-06-02}}
{{Ball culture}}