This is not a Wikipedia article: It is an individual user's work-in-progress page, and may be incomplete and/or unreliable. For guidance on developing this draft, see
Wikipedia:So you made a userspace draft. Find sources:
Google (
books ·
news ·
scholar ·
free images ·
WP refs) ·
FENS ·
JSTOR ·
TWL |
My proposed version of this section, draft ver 2.2:
In 1793, the term "politically correct" appeared in a U.S. Supreme Court judgment of a political-lawsuit. [1] [2] By 1798 the term was used in Britain to discuss the public opinion [3], by 1804 it was being used in contexts such as below:
In your paper on Monday [...] you offered some observations to your readers which were evidently well-meant though they were not politically correct [4]
while by 1810 it was employed in literary criticism [5] and in the debates in British Parliament [6]. The term "politically correct" was used in the U.S. in print from 1832 [7] and the very term "political correctness" from 1833 onwards [8]. By the 1860s the terms have entered Australian political debates. [9]
William Safire claims that the first recorded use of the term in the modern sense is by Toni Cade in the 1970 anthology The Black Woman. [10]
During post-WWI occupation German papers were suspended for accusing "French colored Colonial troops" and for having "employed certain terms and expressions which they might better have omitted" due to the current political climate of "exaggerated accusations" against these colored troops and the paucity of independent sources [11].
-----------------
That his Lordship was either morally or politically correct, in an opinion which tended to perpetuate political incapacities on account of religious tenets, would, perhaps, be difficult to prove...
In your paper on Monday [...] you offered some observations to your readers which were evidently well-meant though they were not politically correct
{{
cite news}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)
Yet, if "he is a good master and a good family man, and continues as politically correct in his writings as he has been of late years", we will even pardon him for "his affectation of weakness"...
[Hear hear, hear!] I do not contend that such a sentiment is politically correct. All I contend is, that such a sentiment does exist, and that it will continue.
...if it is either politically or morally correct to reduce a whole nation to poverty for the benefit of a few...
{{
cite news}}
: line feed character in |quote=
at position 12 (
help)
We are so well pleased with the good sense, spirit and political correctness of the following editorial in the last Dayton Whig
For to call it " a new colony " is only politically correct - the stress should be laid on the word "colony".
Finds Negro troops orderly on Rhine Charges are German Propaganda 'Especially for America' 66 actual crimes known [...] [Newspapers] Rheinishe Zeitung and the Kolnische Volkszeitung ... employed certain terms and expressions which they might better have omitted... Undoubtedly many cases have occurred where many girls or women have been assaulted by of the French colored Colonial troops... cases which were not included in official figures...
{{
cite news}}
: line feed character in |quote=
at position 36 (
help)
This is not a Wikipedia article: It is an individual user's work-in-progress page, and may be incomplete and/or unreliable. For guidance on developing this draft, see
Wikipedia:So you made a userspace draft. Find sources:
Google (
books ·
news ·
scholar ·
free images ·
WP refs) ·
FENS ·
JSTOR ·
TWL |
My proposed version of this section, draft ver 2.2:
In 1793, the term "politically correct" appeared in a U.S. Supreme Court judgment of a political-lawsuit. [1] [2] By 1798 the term was used in Britain to discuss the public opinion [3], by 1804 it was being used in contexts such as below:
In your paper on Monday [...] you offered some observations to your readers which were evidently well-meant though they were not politically correct [4]
while by 1810 it was employed in literary criticism [5] and in the debates in British Parliament [6]. The term "politically correct" was used in the U.S. in print from 1832 [7] and the very term "political correctness" from 1833 onwards [8]. By the 1860s the terms have entered Australian political debates. [9]
William Safire claims that the first recorded use of the term in the modern sense is by Toni Cade in the 1970 anthology The Black Woman. [10]
During post-WWI occupation German papers were suspended for accusing "French colored Colonial troops" and for having "employed certain terms and expressions which they might better have omitted" due to the current political climate of "exaggerated accusations" against these colored troops and the paucity of independent sources [11].
-----------------
That his Lordship was either morally or politically correct, in an opinion which tended to perpetuate political incapacities on account of religious tenets, would, perhaps, be difficult to prove...
In your paper on Monday [...] you offered some observations to your readers which were evidently well-meant though they were not politically correct
{{
cite news}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)
Yet, if "he is a good master and a good family man, and continues as politically correct in his writings as he has been of late years", we will even pardon him for "his affectation of weakness"...
[Hear hear, hear!] I do not contend that such a sentiment is politically correct. All I contend is, that such a sentiment does exist, and that it will continue.
...if it is either politically or morally correct to reduce a whole nation to poverty for the benefit of a few...
{{
cite news}}
: line feed character in |quote=
at position 12 (
help)
We are so well pleased with the good sense, spirit and political correctness of the following editorial in the last Dayton Whig
For to call it " a new colony " is only politically correct - the stress should be laid on the word "colony".
Finds Negro troops orderly on Rhine Charges are German Propaganda 'Especially for America' 66 actual crimes known [...] [Newspapers] Rheinishe Zeitung and the Kolnische Volkszeitung ... employed certain terms and expressions which they might better have omitted... Undoubtedly many cases have occurred where many girls or women have been assaulted by of the French colored Colonial troops... cases which were not included in official figures...
{{
cite news}}
: line feed character in |quote=
at position 36 (
help)