Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. Cracker (term) Cracker, sometimes cracka or white cracker, is a racial slur directed towards white people, [1][2][3] used especially with regard to poor rural whites in the Southern United States. [4] Although commonly a pejorative, it is also used in a neutral context, particularly in reference to a native of Florida or Georgia (see Florida ...

  2. Jul 1, 2013 · But it turns out cracker's roots go back even further than the 17th century. All the way back to the age of Shakespeare, at least. "The meaning of the word has changed a lot over the last four ...

  3. Apr 24, 2024 · The termCracker” carries a complex backstory. Historians believe that “Cracker” originated in the United States, particularly in the South, although its exact origins are debated. During an interview with NPR, historian, writer and author Jelani Cobb, who has done extensive research on the term, suggested that the word emerged in the 18th century in the Antebellum South.

  4. Jul 1, 2013 · The term injected race into Zimmerman's second-degree murder trial. "Cracker" has a murky history but generally describes poor whites. The slur is widely considered an insult among white ...

  5. May 24, 2013 · In Elizabethian English, the word cracker meant braggert. Shakespeare's King John (1595) includes the statement: "What cracker is this . . . that deafes our ears / With this abundance of superfluous breath?" By 1760 the English, both in Colonial America and in Great Britain were using the word cracker to describe the Scot-Irish settlers in the ...

  6. Jul 1, 2023 · The N-word and “cracker” have different historical contexts and power dynamics. The N-word has a long history of oppression and racial violence against black people. “Cracker” historically referred to slave owners and does not carry the same weight of oppression. Current power dynamics make it problematic for white people to use the N-word.

  7. People also ask

  8. Jul 2, 2013 · He'd written about the etymology of some anti-white slurs: peckerwood, Miss Anne and Mister Charlie, and buckra, a term that was once widely used throughout the black diaspora, in the Americas, the Caribbean and in West Africa. "Cracker," the old standby of Anglo insults was first noted in the mid 18th century, making it older than the United ...