Forward!
Amidst all
the commentary following the Obama re-election, there has been little attention
paid to the importance of punctuation in securing the president’s victory. The initial reception of Obama’s campaign
slogan ‘Forward.’ was decidedly lukewarm, with criticism directed at its
inclusion of the full stop, which one of his advisers argued could be taken to
mean ‘forward, now stop’. Although
objecting to the use of the period here, Austin Goolsbee did note that it could
be worse, ‘It could be “Forward” comma, which would make it raise the question
“and now what?”’ Carol Lee of The Wall Street Journal consulted grammatical
experts over this use of the full stop, with some objecting to it on the
grounds that ‘Forward’ is not a sentence.
George Lakoff, a professor of Linguistics, argued that the full stop,
termed the ‘period’ in America, is appropriate because ‘Forward’ is an
imperative sentence: ‘You can look at the period as adding a sense of finality,
making a strong statement: Forward. Period. And no more’.
Despite Lakoff’s defence, there followed a
tendency for the full stop to be dropped in campaign ads. One of Obama’s spokespeople claimed that
there was no particular reason for this, suggesting that further punctuation
excitement could be around the corner: ‘Stay on your toes—anything could
happen. Do not be surprised if we introduce a semicolon.’ More excitement was to come, but in the form
of the exclamation mark rather than the semicolon, added in October. Rather than endorsing Lakoff’s interpretation
of the slogan as an imperative, the Obama camp explained the addition of the
exclamation mark as a way of ‘pumping up’ the slogan to reflect the team’s
continued energy for the campaign. The
rest is, of course, history. Not
strictly about spelling, I know, but surely a better indication that
punctuation matters than that old joke about a panda.
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