(Redirected from –ism)
The
English suffix ''-'ism''' was first used to form a
noun of action from a verb. For example, baptize (or literally derived from "to dip") becomes "baptism." It is taken from the
Greek suffix ''-ismos,''
Latin -ismus, and Old French -isme, that likewise forms abstract nouns from verbal stems. An example is ''baptism'', from Greek ''baptismos'' "immersion", derived from ''baptizein'', a Greek verb meaning "to immerse". Its usage was later extended to signify larger organized systems and concepts —in
belief,
ideology,
doctrine, and
ritual practice.
The first recorded usage of the suffix ''ism'' as a separate word in its own right was in
1680. By the nineteenth century it was being used by
Thomas Carlyle to signify a pre-packaged
ideology. It was later used in this sense by such writers as
Julian Huxley and
George Bernard Shaw.
In the United States of the mid-nineteenth century, the phrase "the isms" was used as a collective derogatory term to lump together the radical social reform movements of the day (such as
slavery abolitionism,
feminism,
alcohol prohibitionism,
Fourierism,
pacifism, early
socialism, etc.) and various spiritual or religious movements considered non-mainstream by the standards of the time (such as
Transcendentalism,
spiritualism or "spirit rapping",
Mormonism, the
Oneida movement often accused of "free love", etc.). Southerners often prided themselves on the American South being free from all of these pernicious "Isms" (except for alcohol temperance campaigning, which was compatible with a traditional Protestant focus on strict individual morality). So on
September 5th and
9th 1856, the ''Examiner'' newspaper of
Richmond, Virginia ran editorials on "Our Enemies, the Isms and their Purposes", while in
1858 "Parson" Brownlow called for a "Missionary Society of the South, for the Conversion of the Freedom Shriekers, Spiritualists, Free-lovers, Fourierites, and
Infidel Reformers of the North" (see ''The Freedom-of-thought Struggle in the Old South'' by Clement Eaton).
In the present day, it appears in the title of a standard survey of political thought, ''Today's ISMS'' by William Ebenstein, first published in the
1950s, and now in its 11th edition.
The -ism suffix can be used to express the following concepts:
★ doctrine or
philosophy (e.g.
pacifism,
olympism)
★
theory developed by an individual (e.g.
Marxism)
★
political movement (e.g.
feminism)
★
artistic movement (e.g.
cubism)
★
action,
process or
practice (e.g.
voyeurism)
★
characteristic,
quality or origin (e.g.
heroism)
★
state or
condition (e.g.
pauperism)
★
excess or
disease (e.g.
botulism)
★
prejudice or
bias (e.g.
racism)
★ characteristic
speech patterns (e.g.
Yogiism,
Bushism)
★
religion or belief system (e.g.
Mormonism)
Many ''isms'' are defined as an act or practice by some, while also being defined as the doctrine or philosophy ''behind'' the act or practice by others. Examples include
activism,
altruism,
despotism,
elitism,
optimism,
sexism and
terrorism.
See also
★
List of belief systems
★
List of philosophical isms
★
classical compound
★
-ology