The Ego Has Landed

Language enthusiasts rejoice: in this week’s NY Times Magazine, Caroline Winter asks why English speakers capitalize the word ‘I’. In the informative but (unfortunately) brief piece, Winter also hypothesizes such an action’s outcome:

So what effect has capitalizing “I” but not “you” — or any other pronoun — had on English speakers? It’s impossible to know, but perhaps our individualistic, workaholic society would be more rooted in community and quality and less focused on money and success if we each thought of ourselves as a small “i” with a sweet little dot. There have, of course, been plenty of rich and dominant cultures throughout history that have gotten by just fine without capitalizing the first-person pronoun or ever writing it down at all. There have also been cultures that committed atrocities even while capitalizing “you.”

Topics

Activism, Agriculture, Arts, Culture, Dance, Design, Economics, Education, Environment, Film, History, Humor, Law, Leaders, Linguistics, Misdirection, Music, Opinion, Philosophy, Politics, Religion, Science, Sexuality, Technology, Upcoming, Writing

In the Magazine

Registration via Interview: Weighing the Schlep Against the Benefits
by Helen Goodman '11

The Weekly
by Rebecca Rubenstein ’09

Three Poems
by Scribe '11

Nassau Street
by Clarissa Long '11

Ghazal for Rebirth
by Rebecca Chou '12

When Gary Snyder Read
by Ellie Horowitz '11

The Weekly
by Helen Goodman '11

Choosing to Live: My Year Abroad in Spain
by Kristen Dillman '11

Abortion Policy and Rhetoric in Europe and the United States
by Danielle Young '09

The Weekly
by Poppy Lyttle '11

The Curious Success of Vitamin Water
by Helen Goodman '11

What Is To Be Done?
by Tom Loder '09

The Weekly
by Poppy Lyttle '11

Catholicism: Wow?
by Jasmine Rivera ’09

Hill House Evictions Raise Doubts About SLC Sincerity
by Hana Denson ’09

Interview with Peter Young
by Students Promoting Awareness of Animal Rights (SPAAR)

Gannochy
by Robert Ruttenberg ’11

The Weekly
by Poppy Lyttle ’11

Out With The Old and In With The New: The Hill House Evictions and The Rhetoric of Relocation
by Helen Goodman ’11

Writing Life
by Robert Ruttenberg ’11

Copyright ©2005-2008 Sadie Lou and its respective authors.
Sadie Lou is published by the students of Sarah Lawrence College.
Designed by Gabriel Aronson ’08 and Nevan Scott ’09.