1. Kunti

1. Kunti

By Mina Moriarty

Image for postImage for postIllustrations by Katie Tandy

Our self-contempt originates in this: in knowing we are ?cunt?.

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The Hindu Goddess Kunti, or great ?Yoni of the Universe,? represented the beauty and power of the female body in Mah?bh?rata, a major Sanskrit epic of ancient India. (And soon to be movie.) The Mahabharata was a historical Hindu text, believed to have been written between 200 and 400 BC, containing mythological and didactic tales of heroism and the sovereign rivalry between two families. Not only did Yoni lead a powerful matriarchy that rivals the discourse of contemporary gender politics, but she encompassed life itself; she was worshiped at hundreds of shrines across the ancient Eastern world.

2. Christianity And The Demonization Of Female Sexuality

In the Middle Ages, Christian clergymen preached the idea of a woman?s genitals as a potent source of evil, referring to the ?Cunnus Diaboli,? meaning ?Devilish Cunt.?

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Shrines across South Asia depicting any reference to the Goddess Kunti were also destroyed; they were deemed grotesque and blasphemous.

3. Culturally Diverse Origins

3a. Originating in India through the Goddess Kunti, the word has since evolved from the Old Norse ?kunta,? referring to vulvas, with many variations existing in other Germanic and Scandinavian languages, including the Danish ?kunte? and the modern use of ?kont? in Dutch, meaning ?buttocks.?

3b. In Anglo Saxon, ?Cu? is one of the oldest word sounds in recorded language, a feminine meaning that has evolved into words such as ?cow,? ?cunt,? and ?queen,? though the earliest ?cunt? has been used in English is during the Middle Ages.

3c. Since the etymology of ?cunt? remains contested, there is also the possibility that it stems from the Latin for rabbit hole, ?cuniculus,? connected to the Latin ?cunnus,? meaning ?vulva.? (Another possible source is the Latin ?cuneus,? meaning ?triangular wedge.?)

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4. Middle English Euphemism

The Oxford English Dictionary also suggests ?quaint,? queynte in Middle English, as a euphemistic substitution for cunt, with one of the best-known examples being found in the late 14th century in Chaucer?s Canterbury Tales. In Miller?s Tale, Nicholas attempts to seduce the miller?s wife, he ?prively [?] caught her by the queynte.?

5. A Cunt-ish Country

The 1500s saw Shakespeare, rather than directly referring to ?cunt? or ?cunny,? alluding to the word in suggestive disguise forms like ?cut,? ?constable,? and ?country.? This is evident in Act Three Scene 2 of Hamlet, in which Hamlet says, ?Do you think I mean country matters?? followed by, ?That?s a fair thought to lie between a maid?s legs.?

6. Scottish Rabbits

The slang word ?cunny? is also found in 1719 in the first volume of Thomas D?Urfrey?s Wit and Mirth: Or Pills to Purge Melancholy, where it is associated with ?coney? ? a word that came to mean ?rabbit.?

?Cunny? was also regularly used in Scottish bawdy verse such as that of Robert Burns in ?My girl she?s airy? when he says, ?Her taper white leg wth an et, and a, c, / For her a, b, e, d, and her c, u, n, t.?

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7. The Cunt Liberated

In 1929, D.H Lawrence?s Lady Chatterley?s Lover was banned for promoting adultery. And although viewed as ?obscene? in the early part of the 20th century, we are now ? with the glorious benefit of hindsight ? able to read this novel as a progressive, largely joyful account of promiscuous sex from a female point of view. Lawrence believed in the redemptive power of mutual orgasm, and so it comes as no surprise that ?cunt? was used freely in this text to express sexual pleasure, ?a woman?s a lovely thing when ?er ?s deep ter fuck, and cunt?s good.?

8. Just Beat It

Beat writers such as Jack Kerouac used ?cunt? liberally as a means of conflating love, desire, and sexual aggression in their characters ? it served as both a means to normalize the word and shock the reader into confronting their relationship with it. The original scroll version of On The Road boasts, ?I wanted to jump down from a mast and land right in her cunt.?

9. Reclamations

Eve Ensler calls women to reclaim the word in ? what else ? ?Reclaiming CUNT? with her play the Vagina Monologues. ?I call it cunt,? she writes. ?I?ve reclaimed it, ?cunt.? I really like it.?

10. A (Possible) Chapel Of Cunt

Germaine Greer?s investigations on the BBC?s Balderdash and Piffle see her paint ?CUNT? in bright red letters on a white wall and ask, ?Why is this the most offensive word in the English language?? She goes on to discuss its fraught etymology and speaks to members of the public about how they view the word ? and why.

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Can we ever truly reappropriate ?Cunt?? Can we use it with pride? Can we chip away at the palace of the phallus and instate a chapel of Cunt in its wake?

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