The Columbus Dispatch

The history of ‘Karen’ is complicate­d

- Henry Goldblatt

Ask a woman named Karen what she used to think of her name, and you’ll hear phrases like ‘‘generic,’’ ‘‘perfectly serviceabl­e’’ and ‘‘an easy name.’’

In 2020, Karen is no longer ‘‘an easy name.’’ Once popular for girls born in the 1960s, it then became a pseudonym for a middle-aged busybody with a blond choppy bob who asks to speak to the manager. Now the moniker has most recently morphed into a symbol of racism and white privilege.

A ‘‘Karen’’ now roams restaurant­s and stores, often without a mask during this coronaviru­s era, spewing venom and calling the authoritie­s to tattle, usually on people of color and often putting them in dangerous situations. And while this archetype had previously been called ‘‘Permit Patty’’ or ‘‘BBQ Becky,’’ ‘‘Karen’’ has stuck.

In fact, many news reports don’t even bother to use a woman’s actual given name. Whitefish Karen (named for her town in Montana) coughed on a couple when they called her out for not wearing a mask inside a grocery store. Kroger Karen, named after the supermarke­t chain, blocked an African American mother’s car so the woman couldn’t leave the market’s parking lot. San Francisco Karen called the police on a Filipino man stenciling ‘‘Black Lives Matter’’ on his own property.

And, of course, the Queen of Karens

— Amy Cooper, also known as Central Park Karen — threatened and fabricated accusation­s against a Black man after he politely asked her to put her dog on a leash, as park rules stated.

For some women with the name Karen, these videos have made them outraged, of course, but also, at times, ashamed.

‘‘It’s just so embarrassi­ng, honestly,“said Karen Scholl, a 47-year-old writer in Columbus. “But I can’t get bent out of shape. I have no control over it. There are people losing their lives every day. If it’s the only thing I have to be upset about in this world, then good for me.’’

Karen Chang, a Bay Area resident who

works in business management, had shrugged off early memes, but then the Cooper video changed everything for her.

‘‘It was very upsetting, but I would sacrifice my name for the visibility and awareness that incident generated,’’ said Chang, who is Asian American. Indeed, she may do just that. She said she’s considerin­g changing her name to ‘‘KC’’ after she and her fiance eventually wed. ‘‘It has always been a term of endearment.’’

Chang may be able to change her name, but if one San Francisco Board of Supervisor­s member, Shamann Walton, has his way, a version of ‘‘Karen’’ will be immortaliz­ed into city law.

In early July, Walton introduced the CAREN (Caution Against Racially Exploitati­ve Non-emergencie­s) Act (presumably he couldn’t come up with a suitable word that began with K). The bill would change the city’s code to punish people who call 911 and file false, racially biased complaints.

That’s a step too far for Karen OrtizOrban­d, a Boston-area nurse who is of Puerto Rican and Dominican descent.

She supports the contents of the proposal but emailed Walton’s office urging him to reconsider its title.

‘‘I asked him to be mindful of the fact that there are women named Karen and people aren’t differenti­ating between the two. And by naming this bill as he has, he’s doing exactly what the metaphoric­al Karen is doing: creating an opportunit­y for discrimina­tion,’’ said Ortiz-orband, who is in her late 40s.

Karen Gormandy, a literary agent and arts studio manager in New York City, said she doesn’t take it personally when she hears her name used in these contexts ‘‘because I assign that meme to white people. I’m totally disconnect­ed from it. I’m on the receiving end of this misbehavio­r,’’ Gormandy, 61, said. ‘‘I feel as a person of color I don’t need to apologize and explain my name.’’ But why the name Karen? Robin Queen, chair of the linguistic­s department at University of Michigan, has looked closely at this question, and her exploratio­n led her to, of all people, Dane Cook.

His 2005 comedy album contains a riff called ‘‘The Friend Nobody Likes’’: ‘‘There is one person in a group of friends that nobody likes,’’ Cook said, using an expletive to emphasize how much they are, in fact, disliked. ‘‘They basically keep them there to hate their guts. When that person is not around the rest of your little base camp, your hobby is cutting that person down.’’ As an ‘‘example’’ of this person, he describes a woman named Karen.

Other antecedent­s include Amanda Seyfried’s vacant Karen in ‘‘Mean Girls,’’ who racistly spouts to Lindsay Lohan’s Cady, ‘‘If you’re from Africa, why are you white?’’ A parody account on Reddit from late 2017 based on the rants of a spurned husband is also often cited as an early driver and highlights the sexism of the ‘‘Karen’’ trope.

Karen Grigsby Bates, senior correspond­ent for the ‘‘Code Switch’’ podcast on NPR, said Karen’s roots are anchored deep in American folklore. Bates — who embarked on this research not because of her name but because the phenomenon was ‘‘a convergenc­e of gender, race, class, social upheaval and social media in this great big tornado’’ — pointed to the term ‘‘Miss Ann’’ from the antebellum and Jim Crow periods.

African Americans used the term as code ‘‘to refer to these unreasonab­le white women,’’ Bates said. She described Miss Ann as ‘‘a woman who knew her place in society, was complicit in maintainin­g it, and who was at the upper end of the hierarchy. Even if she was a nice Miss Ann, she was still upholding this system that said, ‘White womanhood above all else, except white manhood.’’’

Researcher­s also point to the demographi­c characteri­stics of the name Karen. According to Social Security data, Karen soared in popularity in the 1960s, peaking as the third-most-popular baby name of 1965, but never had a resurgence. The archetype is meant to evoke a woman of a certain age, but then again, Linda, Cynthia or Susan would, too.

That’s where the Karen theories get geekily fascinatin­g. Miriam Eckert, who has a doctorate in linguistic­s and lives in Boulder, Colorado, said that the word ‘‘Karen’’ contains what’s known as a ‘‘voiceless plosive.’’

‘‘That’s the K sound at the beginning of the word,’’ Eckert said. ‘‘When you say some consonants, like K or a T, there’s a complete blockage of airflow and a sudden release — whereas a name like Cynthia has no stops at all. Karen is kind of a harsh sound that you can really spit out. And that aligns with the kind of person we are thinking of when we talk about a ‘Karen.’’’

 ?? [CHRISTIAN COOPER] ?? Amy Cooper — also known as Central Park Karen — threatened and fabricated accusation­s against a Black man after he asked her to put her dog on a leash, as park rules stated.
[CHRISTIAN COOPER] Amy Cooper — also known as Central Park Karen — threatened and fabricated accusation­s against a Black man after he asked her to put her dog on a leash, as park rules stated.

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