[Note: This post was updated on March 3, 2021.]
Q: Iâm seeing the word âwokeâ all over the place. Whatâs the story about this word du jour? It seems to mean âpolitically aware.â
A: Yes, the adjective âwokeâ has become trendy of late, but itâs not new.
In the figurative sense of âalertâ or âhip,â the word has been around since the early 1960s. But in recent decades it has come to have a more specific figurative meaningâalert to racial or social injustice.
The Oxford English Dictionary says the usage is derived from the âwokeâ thatâs a past tense of the verb âwakeââto become awake or emerge from sleep. (We discussed the verbs âwake,â âwaken,â âawake,â and âawakenâ in 2012.)
Originally, the OED says, the figurative adjective âwokeâ meant âwell-informed, up-to-date.â
The dictionaryâs earliest figurative example is from âIf Youâre Woke, You Dig It,â an article about black slang that appeared in the May 20, 1962, issue of the New York Times Magazine.
The article, by the Harlem novelist William Melvin Kelley, includes a lexicon in which he describes âwokeâ as an adjective meaning âwell-informed, up-to-date,â as in âMan Iâm woke.â
Today, the dictionary says, the word chiefly means âalert to racial or social discrimination and injustice.â
The next example in the OED illustrates that sense of the word: âI been sleeping all my life. And now that Mr. Garvey done woke me up, Iâm gon stay woke. And Iâm gon help him wake up other black folk.â (A line of dialogue in Barry Beckhamâs 1972 play Garvey Lives!)
As Oxford explains, the adjective is frequently heard in the phrase âstay woke,â which is âoften used as an exhortation.â
Here’s a more recent example of the phrase: âI donât think [Kareem] Abdul-Jabbar would mind if I concluded that he, just like the activists of the Black Lives Matter movement, wants America to âstay woke.â â (From a Sept. 16, 2016, opinion column by the author Marita Golden in The Washington Post.)
This activist use of âwoke,â Oxford says, was âperhaps popularized through its association with African-American civil rights activism (in recent years particularly the Black Lives Matter movement), and by the lyrics of the 2008 song âMaster Teacherâ by American singer-songwriter Erykah Badu, in which the words âI stay wokeâ serve as a refrain.â
The OED is an etymological dictionary based on historical evidence. Standard dictionaries, too, have entries for this use of âwoke.â
Merriam-Webster labels the usage âchiefly US slangâ and defines it as âaware of and actively attentive to important facts and issues (especially issues of racial and social justice).â
M-W illustrates the usage with quotations from the news: âWe have a moral obligation to âstay woke,â take a stand and be active,â and âBrad Pitt is not only woke, but the wokest man in Hollywood.â
American Heritage calls it âslangâ derived from African-American Vernacular English and defines it as âaware of the injustice of the social system in which one lives.â
Oxford Dictionaries online labels it âUS informalâ and says it means âalert to injustice in society, especially racism.â
The American Dialect Society is hip to âwoke.â In January 2017, at the societyâs annual meeting, members chose it as the Slang Word of the Year for 2016 (definition: âsocially aware or enlightenedâ).
The journal American Speech, in its âAmong the New Wordsâ column in May 2017, described âwokeâ as âan item of long-standing African American usage … that has recently undergone cultural appropriation.â
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