Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/11/25
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Well, I have to be a defender of the English language and encourage the proper use of the terms oxymoron. This is the Leica list and Leica's are, among other things, about precision. Eric Welch wrote: Such is the oxymoronic term "candid portrait." Not to pick on Eric (he is much too erudite and careful of most things), but I hear more and more the misuse of this wonderful-on-the-tongue word. So says the Oxford English Dictionary, volume XI: A thetorical figure by which contradictory or incongruous terms are conjoined so as to give point to the statement or expression; an expression, in its superficial or literal meaning self-contradictory or absurd, but involving a point. (Now often loosely or erroneously used as if merely equals a contradiction in terms, an incongruous conjunction). It goes on to quote Germain Greer, from the Female Eunuch, "It would be oxymoronic to claim to be gently, reliably or sensibly in love." And there is a debatable truth. We might agree, though, that William Klein's work, especially his book on Japan as, perhaps, a "riotous symphony" or Sam Abel's work as "booming quietude." The oxymoron is related to the metaphor, that most wonderful of all literary devices. And, this being the internet, there you have my quiet scream. donal - -- __________ Donal Philby San Diego www.donalphilby.com