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03.05.2004
I have, in the endless
reels of free time that constitute my life, created a taxonomy
which more clearly defines three words which are often used interchangably
and, to my mind, incorrectly: DORKS, NERDS and GEEKS.
It is through common understanding and plain speaking that our
civilization advances; we may never be at peace until this issue
is clarified.
DORKS are the most 'mainstreamed' of
this troika of dweebiness. Your dork is almost a normal human
being; the quality of dorky is not strained. A dork is simply
someone with an enthusiasm for something that, while not fully
embraced by the popular culture, is also not entirely a "fringe"
activity. In addition, your dork tends to enthusiastic about
rather than obsessed by her pleasures; she is a fan rather than
a fanatic. Dorks are, in short, people who are just slightly
too fond of marginally acceptable activities. A dork is someone
who likes Broadway musicals, legitimate theatre, Hummel or Precious
Moments figurines, collectible thimbles, marching bands, or birdwatching.
Your mother can be a dork, but not a nerd or a geek. Dorkiness
is harmless, even cute; there is in dorkitude none of the malignance
of the geek or the arrogance of the nerd. Dorks are our children,
our parents, our cousins who collect coins. God smiles on the
dork. (The teenage equivalent of the dork is the "fag",
as in "band fag" or "drama fag"). If you
have ever worn a 'Cats' sweatshirt, you are most likely a dork.
NERDS are perhaps the most misunderstood
of the marginalia-enthusiast triumvirate. Simply put, the nerd
is someone whose unpopular passion can be put to a practical
-- indeed, even profitable -- use. If you make money, especially
a lot of money, off of the activity that got you wedgies in high
school, you are probably a nerd. The most common sort of nerd
is the computer nerd, but there are nerds in all the sciences:
physics nerds, chemistry nerds, engineering nerds, math nerds,
even radio & telecommunications nerds. Indeed, nerdistry
is almost a necessary component to a career in the science or
technology fields. (The teenage nerd is a "wad", be
he a gaywad, a dickwad or a dorkwad.) Since nerds have become
more necessary to the smooth functioning of society in light
of the increased role computers play in our lives, they have
lost some of their outsider cachet; they have attempted to counter
this trend by co-opting the term "geek". Make no mistake:
an expert with computers is a nerd, not a geek. They may dress
themselves up in the pejorative cool of geekdom, but computer
nerds they were and computer nerds they remain. They will soon
be the true masters of our society; they should revel in their
nerdiness, not deny it. Nerds of the world, stand tall. Or as
tall as you can, with your bad posture.
GEEKS are the bottom-feeders of the
unholy trio of sit-at-the-back-of-the-cafeteria types. A geek
may glory in his role (God knows I do), but secretly, he knows
he is just playing semantic bingo. He knows that, like his chicken-decapitating
namesake, he is the dregs of the dregs, the lowest of the low.
The geek is typefied by his obsessive, fruitless dedication to
and knowledge of phenomena of only marginal interest to even
other geeks, and of no interest to normal human beings. Unlike
the dork, the geek's passions lie not on the borders of popular
culture, but in faraway lands of total lameness; unlike the nerd,
his interests have absolutely no profit potential or practical
value. (It is not for nothing that the teenage geek is known
as the "loser".) The most common sorts of geek are
comic book, science fiction, fantasy, role-playing and movie
geeks; but there are as many sorts of geek as there are colors
of the junk-culture rainbow. There are music geeks (and, even
more stupefying, sub-genre geeks); there are romance novel geeks;
there are sports geeks and internet geeks and real-vampire geeks.
There is no theoretical limit to the sort of thing one can be
geeky about, since there are a limitless number of inconsequential,
pointless activities which normal people rightly have no interest
in. I myself am geeky about things as commonplace as baseball
and comic books, and things as obscure as postmodernism and underground
rap music. Yet for all their flaws, the saddest thing about a
geek is if he doesn't recognize who he is. A geek is a geek,
but a self-denying geek is a geek's geek.
Let your geek flags fly,
my brothers, my sisters. Represent.
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