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Literary notes about Stigmatize (AI summary)

The word "stigmatize" in literature has been employed as a potent term to assign negative labels and moral judgment to various subjects. In these examples, authors use the term to mark ideas, facts, or groups as unworthy or morally tainted. Freud, for instance, uses it to connote an intentional labeling of facts as "filthy" [1], while Graves employs it in a dismissive tone toward certain followers [2]. Edgar Allan Poe’s instance suggests that what is often dismissed by the unlearned as mere cant may in fact be a complex form of spirituality, indicating that stigmatization can serve to undermine unconventional viewpoints [3]. Similarly, Carnegie and Esenwein depict the act of stigmatizing as an inherent societal rejection of deeds lacking redeeming qualities [4]. Collectively, these examples reveal that the term "stigmatize" is a versatile literary tool for expressing disapproval and marginalizing nuanced or controversial ideas.
  1. Upon being questioned, he explained that he meant to stigmatize these facts as " filthy ."
    — from A General Introduction to Psychoanalysis by Sigmund Freud
  2. His followers have been stigmatize!
    — from The World's Sixteen Crucified Saviors; Or, Christianity Before Christ by Kersey Graves
  3. No profundity, no reading, no metaphysics—nothing which the learned call spirituality, and which the unlearned choose to stigmatize as cant.
    — from The Works of Edgar Allan Poe, The Raven Edition by Edgar Allan Poe
  4. The whole world will repudiate and stigmatize it as a deed without a shade of redeeming light....
    — from The Art of Public Speaking by Dale Carnegie and J. Berg Esenwein

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