Phraseology and Culture in English
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Phraseology and Culture in English
8. “Mondayitis”
The following dialogue took place one Saturday in June or July 2001, just before 1 pm, in a CD shop near the University of Tasmania’s Sandy Bay campus. The salesman whom I was talking to was in a hurry to go home, there were no other customers, and the business would be closed for the rest of the weekend. “I’m also looking for something by a guy whose name is Eddie Thunder Stealer. He’s got something called ‘Mondayitis’”, I told him. The salesman kept on browsing through the title lists he had available to him, still looking for another title I had put to him moments earlier. His reply, however, was instantaneous. Without looking up, he said: “Don’t we all?” Of course, he had understood that I was looking for a song called “Mondayitis”. But I had been slightly clumsy in my choice of words, and he had seized the moment to play on words. He had immediately recog- 98 Bert Peeters nised the term, which appears to be much more widely used in Australia than anywhere else, and he had replied knowingly. 16 Morphologically, the word Mondayitis consists of a root referring to the first day of the week, and a suffix -itis, also found in words such as bron- chitis and appendicitis. Unlike its learned counterparts, it doesn’t denote a physical condition but a mental one. The Macquarie Dictionary of Austra- lian Colloquial Language (Delbridge 1988) describes Mondayitis as a form of ‘lassitude and general reluctance to work as is often experienced on Mon- days’. The Penguin Book of Australian Slang (Johansen 1996) and the Aus- tralian Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English (Moore 1997) talk about a fictitious disease, the former towards the end of its definition (‘gen- eral lack of desire to go to work, often experienced on Monday after the weekend break; a fictitious illness due to this’), the latter towards the start (‘a fictitious disease, the chief symptom of which is a marked reluctance to resume work after the weekend break’). “Sick or not, we just can’t shake the Mondayitis”, titles the Sydney Morning Herald (10 February 2003, article by Sherrill Nixon reporting on absenteeism in call centres). Monday- itis is something that, after “the weekend euphoria”, “we all occasionally (more frequently for some) catch a dose of” (Jasch 1997: 4). As a result, one works less well on Mondays – unless one chooses not to work at all. In a poem called Mondayitis, Australian poet and high school teacher Kerry Scuffins relates her fear of getting stuck in mid-sentence in front of a class- room on a Monday morning (Scuffins 1995: 78); to avoid the problem, a “sickie” (see Section 2.2) appears to be called for... But what if the condition lingers, as it sometimes does? According to the Dinkum Dictionary of Aussie English (Antill-Rose 1990), this is the rule: Mondayitis is ‘how the hard working average Australian feels about going to work any day of the week’. On the other hand, “‘Mondayitis’, seven days a week” is the way Chung (1995), addressing an audience of lawyers, describes the well-known condition commonly referred to as “burn- out”; one of the early symptoms is “Mondayitis occurring on Sunday night”. Another comparison that has been made is with a phenomenon called “January Blues”, experienced at the year’s start and defined as ‘a sort of overblown lengthy version of Mondayitis’ (Harry Wiegele, “a special od- yssey”, Perth Clinic Newsletter, February 2002). It is relatively easy to get over a bout of Mondayitis, even though some instances are particularly aggressive, and therefore harder to overcome. In that respect, it may be useful to quote the Sydney Morning Herald of 30 September 2000, the day before the Sydney Olympics closing ceremony. In Australian perceptions of the weekend 99 an article titled “Mondayitis? You ain’t seen nothing yet”, Sue Williams warned her readers against “the worst case of Mondayitis since they in- vented the weekend”. As a giant party had been planned, rather than to give in to nostalgic reflections from as early as the last day of the Games, the risk of what Williams called “a wave of post-games blues” setting in the day after, viz. on Monday, 2 October, was extremely high. Even the foreign press talked about it. Uli Schmetzer (The Chicago Tribune, 2 October) sig- nalled the existence of a virus “known here as Mondayitis”. “Have you ever heard of ‘Mondayitis’?” asked, the same day, in a report titled “‘Monday- itis’ set to hit Sydneysiders”, The Tribune, a newspaper published in Chandi- garh (India). 17 Not that there wasn’t a cure. According to the Sydney Morn- ing Herald, psychiatrists recommended focussing “on the next party, the centenary on January 1 when the country celebrates 100 years of federa- tion, the birth of its nation”. Other cures that have been suggested over the years, without reference to the Olympics, include cycling and singing. The Illawarra Touring Cycle Club (New South Wales) offers cycling trips called The cure for Mondayitis. “Need a cure for Mondayitis?” asks Syd- ney’s Macquarie University Staff News in at least two different issues (22 March 2002, 7 March 2003). Answer: “Join the Macquarie University Sing- ers!”. Finally, there is a radio programme called Mondayitis, on Sydney’s 2RSR-FM, every Monday morning, between 6 and 9 am; and, in Aspley (Queensland), a bowling championship called the Mondayitis Tenpin Bowl- ing League. 18 Download 1.68 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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