Uppity: Snobbish, presumptuous, putting on airs. Also: arrogant; taking liberties beyond one's station. American slang, formed from up plus an adjectival ending suggestive of words such as haughty and snooty.
Uppity entered the southern American vernacular more than a century ago; its first published appearance was in 1880, in the Uncle Remus stories written by Joel Chandler Harris. (A British equivalent, uppish, had been popular since the mid-eighteenth century.) Less widely used synonyms include biggity, hincty, and seddity. Although any of these terms were (and are) used by African-Americans to disparage one another, uppity acquired the status of racial epithet when used by whites to describe blacks who appeared not to "know their place."
Uppity made headlines last week when a two-term Republican congressman from Georgia's eighth district, Lynn Westmoreland, used it to refer to the Democratic candidate for president and his wife. According to The Hill, a newspaper that covers Capitol Hill:
Westmoreland was discussing vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin's speech with reporters outside the House chamber and was asked to compare her with Michelle Obama.
"Just from what little I’ve seen of her and Mr. Obama, Sen. Obama, they're a member of an elitist-class individual that thinks that they're uppity," Westmoreland said.
Asked to clarify that he used the word “uppity,” Westmoreland said, “Uppity, yeah.”
(In his blog, You Don't Say, John McIntyre tries to parse that first sentence and gives up: "The Obamas are members of an individual that thinks that they are uppity?")
Many readers, black and white, interpreted Westmoreland's comment as racist and offensive. In The Atlantic online, Ta-Nehisi Coates wrote:
Uppity is exactly the term white thugs and terrorists used to use for high-achieving blacks--right before they burned down their neighborhoods and ran them out of town. Only this time, they're going for the whole country,
Almost immediately, Westmoreland's spokesman claimed his boss was being misinterpreted. According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution (which pointed out that Westmoreland "was born and raised in the South"), Westmoreland insisted "he'd never heard 'uppity' used in a racially loaded fashion."
The flap found its way into the listserv of the American Dialect Society, where Susan Tamasi asked about the racial connotations of uppity:
Having grown up in the South, I've always known (or felt) that "uppity" is derogatory when used to describe an African American. The term "uppity n***r" definitely rings in my ears when I hear the word. When I heard of Westmoreland's gaff
,I almost choked. However, in conversations with other white folk over the last couple of days, it seems that this connotation is only known by about half. Some claim that it is a neutral term which simply refers to "snobby" or "elite", as Westmoreland claims.
Gregory McNamee responded:
Are your innocent interviewees under the age of 30? Perhaps the term has lost its sting among the young, but anyone of a certain age will immediately know "uppity" as a racist term with a very sharp edge, almost always combined with the N-word lest anyone miss the point.
Westmoreland is 58 years old and from rural Georgia. He claims never to have heard the derogatory term in the little mill town where he grew up. Baldly put, he's a liar--or, as the Los Angeles Times political blog puts it, "The Ticket finds it amazing that someone with such a sheltered upbringing could achieve such success in life."
(The L.A. Times blog post is here.)
McNamee also provided a 1952 citation from F. L. Allen, Big Change II. viii. 130: "The effect of the automobile revolution was especially noticeable in the South, where one began to hear whites complaining about ‘uppity n****s’ on the highways, where there was no Jim Crow."
Read the whole ADS-L thread here.
Note, too, that there are a number of citations for uppity that lack a racial context (e.g., "uppity Minnesota"; "uppity, intelligent animals"; even "When did J. Crew get all uppity with an $1,800 jacket?").
Before the current controversy, Congressman Westmoreland was better known for his co-sponsorship of a bill that would have placed the Ten Commandments in both houses of Congress. When he appeared on "The Colbert Report" in 2006, Westmoreland was at a loss to name more than three of the Commandments.
Runner-up word of the week: snowbilly, "a hillbilly far from the South." Read more at Mr. Verb.
http://nancyfriedman.typepad.com/away_with_words/2008/09/word-of-the-week-uppity.html