Chav edit
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Chav, Chava or Charva is a slang derogatory term applied to certain young people in the United Kingdom. The stereotypical image of a chav is a white aggressive teen or young adult, of working class background, who wears branded sports and casual clothing (baseball caps are also common) who often fights and engages in petty criminality and are often assumed to be unemployed or in a low paid job. The term may originate from the Romany term "Chavvy", which is a general term for young person.1 In its English form it is generally derogative and appeared in mainstream dictionaries in 2005.23

Caricature of a chav

"Chav" has many regional alternatives, its North East variant "charva" or "charv" being a rival term of near identical meaning used in Tyne and Wear. "Charver" was a common word of wide but not all-embracing popularity in Newcastle throughout the latter half of the nineteenth century, synonymous with "lad" or "kid" and derivative of “chawvo”, a Romany expression meaning “a young person, a friend”. During the 1990's "charver" underwent a semantic disfigurement and massive growth in usage within speakers of geordie and some related dialects, its shift in meaning was towards that of a complete insult; at this point "charver" and "chav" became synonyms although the latter was yet to enter common parlance. It is likely "chav" is a recent derivative of "charver" but also possible that the two words are entirely etymologically distinct.456 Other equivalents to "chav" include Scally, prevalent in the north-west (particularly Liverpool) and Townie, a word now seemingly enveloped by "chav". Similar words in use outside England include "neds" or "scunners" in Scotland, "spides" or "skangers" in Ireland and in Northern Ireland the terms "spide", "milly" (from "Mill-girl") and "steek" are used.

Response to the term has ranged from amusement to criticism that it is a new manifestation of classism.7 However, it is important to note that chav is not a straight synonym for "working class person", but refers to a specific mode of behaviour, dress and speech that is far from universal amongst the British working class (although for the most part is restricted to itcitation needed). The term has also been associated with juvenile delinquency, the "ASBO Generation" and "Yob culture".

Contents

Popularisation in the media

From its origins as a slang term, use of the word spread so rapidly that by 2004 it had become a hugely popular word in national newspapers and common parlance in the UK. Susie Dent's Larpers and Shroomers: The Language Report, published by the Oxford University Press, designated it as the "word of the year"8 in 2004.9 A survey in 2005 found that in December 2004 alone 114 British newspaper articles used the word. The popularity of the word has led to the creation of sites devoted to cataloguing and mocking the "chav" lifestyle.

The "chav culture" has been portrayed extensively in British media:

Criticism of the stereotype

The widespread use of the chav stereotype has come under criticism; some argue18 that it amounts simply to snobbery and elitism,7 and that serious social problems such as Anti-Social Behaviour Orders, teenage pregnancy, delinquency and alcoholism in low-income areas should not be scoffed at. Critics of the term have argued that its proponents are “neo-snobs,”19 and that its increasing popularity raises questions about how British society deals with social mobility and class.15 In a February 2005 article in The Times, Julie Burchill argued that use of the word is a form of “social racism,” and that such “sneering” reveals more about the shortcomings of the “chav-haters” than those of their supposed victims.20 The writer John Harris argued along similar lines in a 2007 article in The Guardian.21

Commercial effect

See also

References

  1. ^ "Savvy Chavvy: social entrepreneurs engage gypsies", The Telegraph (2008-07-24). Retrieved on 24 December 2008. 
  2. ^ "'Asbo' and 'chav' make dictionary", BBC News (2005-06-08). Retrieved on 2 September 2006. 
  3. ^ Tweedie, Neil (2005-08-10). "Don't be a plank. Read this and get really clueful", The Telegraph. Retrieved on 2 September 2006. 
  4. ^ "In the name of the Charver", www.sarahbromley.co.uk. 
  5. ^ "GonMad Cumbrian Dictionary", GonMad. 
  6. ^ "Durham & Tyneside Dialect Group, Newsletter Excerpts", Durham & Tyneside Dialect Group. 
  7. ^ a b John, Harris (2006-04-11). "Bottom of the Class" (HTML), The Guardian. Retrieved on 24 February 2007. 
  8. ^ Noel-Tod, Jeremy (2005-04-03). "Colourful whitewash", The Times Literary Supplement. Retrieved on 30 May 2007. 
  9. ^ "AskOxford: Larpers and Shroomers: the Language Report". Oxford University Press. Retrieved on 2006-03-04.
  10. ^ "Goldie Lookin' Chain: Chain reaction", The Independent (2004-08-13). 
  11. ^ Wheeler, Brian (2005-06-30). "Leave chavs alone, say MPs", BBC News. 
  12. ^ Patrick, Guy (2005). "Chav a merry Xmas, Roo", The Sun. 
  13. ^ Davis, Johnny (2006-04-15). "Lady Sovereign: The country's fourth biggest chav", The Independent. 
  14. ^ Byrnes, Sholto (2005-09-11). "Say cheese! Camilla and the Queen of Chav enjoy two right royal", The Independent. 
  15. ^ a b Smith, Alison (2005-06-14). "Media student 'expert on chavs'", BBC News. 
  16. ^ McVeigh, Karen (2004-10-19). "Doff your caps to the chavs ...they're THE word of 2004", The Scotsman. 
  17. ^ The Chav Rich List | Mail Online
  18. ^ Hampson, Tom (2008-07-15). "Ban the Word Chav", The Guardian. 
  19. ^ Bennett, Oliver (2004-01-28). "Sneer nation", The Independent. 
  20. ^ Burchill, Julie (2005-02-18). "Yeah but, no but, why I'm proud to be a chav", The Times. 
  21. ^ Harris, John (2007-03-06). "So now we've finally got our very own 'white trash'", The Guardian. 
  22. ^ King, Ian (2005-01-12). "Burberry not chavin' it", The Sun. 
  23. ^ "The £16m woman takes on Burberry", The Times. 
  24. ^ "Check out the height of ferret fashion. Burberry has", The Telegraph. 
  25. ^ Kwintner, Adrian (13 September 2006). ""Burberry drives tuk-tuk off road"", Brighton & Hove Argus. Retrieved on 18 September, 2006. 
  26. ^ "Asda tries to trade mark "chav"", AOL NEWS. 
  27. ^ [1]

Further reading

Articles