Spook (pronounced spook)
(1) In informal use, a ghost; a specter; an apparition; hobgoblin.
(2) A person whose appearance or conduct is thought “ghost-like”.
(3) In philosophy, a metaphysical manifestation; an
artificial distinction or construct.
(4) In slang, a ghostwriter (one who writes text (typically
columns, autobiography, memoir) published under the name of another,
(5) In slang, an eccentric person (now rare).
(6) In disparaging and offensive slang, term of contempt
used of people of color (historically African-Americans).
(7) In slang, a spy; one engaged in espionage.
(8) In slang, a psychiatrist (originally US but now more
widespread under the influence of pop culture.
(9) In the slang of blackjack, a player who engages in “hole
carding” by attempting to glimpse the dealer's hole card when the dealer checks
under an ace or a 10 to see if a blackjack is present.
(10) In southern African slang any pale or colorless
alcoholic spirit (often as “spook & diesel”).
(11) To haunt; inhabit or appear in or to as a ghost or
spectre.
(12) To frighten; to scare (often as “spooked”).
(13) To become frightened or scared (often as “spooked”);
applied sometimes to animals, especially thoroughbred horses.
1801: A coining of US English, from the Dutch spook (ghost), from the Middle Dutch spooc & spoocke (spook, ghost), from an uncertain Germanic source (the earliest
known link being the Middle Low German spōk
(ghost), others including the Middle Low German spôk & spûk (apparition,
ghost), the Middle High German gespük
(a haunting), the German Spuk (ghost,
apparition, hobgoblin), the Danish spøg
(joke) & spøge (to haunt), the Norwegian
spjok (ghost, specter) and the Swedish
spok (scarecrow) & spöke (ghost). The noun spook in the sense of “spectre,
apparition, ghost” seems first to have appeared in a comical dialect poem,
credited to “an old Dutch man in Albany” and printed in Vermont and Boston
newspapers which credited it to Springer's Weekly Oracle in New London, Connecticut. The regional diversity in language was then
greater and evolutions sometimes simultaneous and the word also appeared in US
English around 1830 as spuke & shpook, at first in the German-settled
regions of Pennsylvania, via Pennsylvania Dutch Gschpuck & Schpuck,
from the German Spuk. Spook & spooking are nouns & verbs,
spooker & spookery are nouns, spooktacular is a noun & adjective, spooktacularly
is an adverb, spooked is a verb & adjective, spookery is a noun, spooky, spookiest
& spookish are adjectives; the noun plural is spooks.
Spooked: Lindsay Lohan in I Know Who Killed Me (2007).
A “spook show” (frightening display) was a term in use by
1880 and in the sense of a “popular exhibition of legerdemain, mentalism or
staged necromancy” it was documented by 1910. The spook house (abandoned house) was in use
in the 1850s, the expression meaning “haunted house” emerging in the 1860s. The meaning “superstition” had emerged by 1918,
presumably an extension from the earlier sense of “a superstitious person”,
documented around the turn of the century although it probably existed longer
in oral use. In the 1890s, “spookist”
(described variously as “jocular” and “a less refined word” was used to refer
to spiritualists and medium (and in those years there were a lot of them, their
numbers spiking after World War I (1914-1918) when many wished to contact the
dead. Spooktacular (a pun on “spectacular”
developed some time during World War II (1939- 1945). The meaning “undercover agent” or “spy” dates
from 1942 (inducing “spookhouse” (haunted house) to pick up the additional
meaning “headquarters of an intelligence operation”, a place presided over by a
“spookmaster” (“spymaster” the preferred modern term). In the same era, in student slang a spook
could be an unattractive girl or a quiet, diligent, introverted student (something
like the modern “nerd” but without any sense of a focus of technology).
Senator Rebecca Ann Felton (1835–1930, left) and Senator Mitch McConnell (b 1942; US senator (Republican-Kentucky) since 1985; Senate Minority Leader since 2021). The spooky resemblance between Senator Fulton (who in 1922 served for one day as a senator (Democratic-Georgia), appointed as a political manoeuvre) and Senator Mitch McConnell has led some to suggest he might be her reincarnated. Some not so acquainted with history assumed the photograph of Senator Felton was Mitch McConnell in drag.
The sense of spook as “a black person” is listed by dictionaries
of US slang as being documented by 1938 (the date of origin uncertain) and it
seems to have begun in African-American (hep-cat) slang and it was not
typically used with any sense of disparagement, nor was it thought in any way offensive
word. However, by 1945 it had picked up
the derogatory racial sense of “black person”, defined specifically as “frightened
negro” and it became a common slur in the post-war world, probably because that
even by then the “N-word” was becoming less acceptable in polite society. That was the “linguistic treadmill” in
practice but spook had also deviated earlier: In 1939 it is attested as meaning
“a white jazz musician” and is listed by some sources as a disparaging term for
a white person by 1947. Spook also developed
a curious fork in military aviation although one probably unrelated to the informal
pilot’s jargon of the 1930s, a “spook” a “novice pilot” of the type who “haunt
the hangers”, hiring air-time and learning to fly for no obvious practical
purpose other than the joy of flying. During
the early 1940s, the US Army Air Force (USAAF) began the recruitment of black
athletes for training as pilots, conducted at the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama;
the group (1940-1948) was known as the Tuskegee Airmen and during World War II (1939-1945) they gained a fine reputation when deployed as combat units. However, they also suffered prejudice and
when first posted to Europe were often called the “Spookwaffe” (a play on Luftwaffe,
the name of the German air force) although as happened decades later with the
by then infamous N-word, some black pilots “re-claimed” the name and used it as
a self-referential term of pride.
Left to right: Spook, the Bacterian ambassador, Benzino Napaloni, Diggaditchie of Bacteria (a parody of Benito Mussolini), Adenoid Hynkel (Adolf Hitler) and Field Marshall Herring (Hermann Göring). The satirical film The Great Dictator (1940) was very much a personal project, Charlie Chaplin (1889–1977) writing, producing & directing as well as staring as Adenoid Hynkel, Phooey of Tomainia. The rather cadaverous looking Spook was the Bacterian ambassador.
Seventy years of spooks.
On 9 September 2019, the Royal Australian Mint released a 50 cent coin to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO), the domestic spy agency (similiar in function to the UK's MI5 (Security Service)). The issue was limited to 20,000 coins and each featured an encrypted code, similar in structure to those used by spooks during the Cold War. At the time of the release, the Mint ran a competition inviting attempts to "solve the code", the prize the only proof commemorative coin in existence. The competition was won by a fourteen year old who is apparently still at liberty, despite having proved him or herself a threat to national security.
Albert
Einstein (1879-1955) gave the word a few memorable phrases but one of the most
evocative is a calque of the German spukhafte
Fernwirkung (rendered by Einstein as spukhafte
Fernwirkungen (spooky actions at a distance) in a letter of 3 March 1947 to
the physicist Max Born (1882–1970)). Einstein
used “spooky actions at a distance” to refer to one of the most challenging
ideas from quantum mechanics: that two particles instantaneously may interact over
a distance and that distance could be that between different sides of the
universe (or if one can’t relate to the universe having “sides”, separated by
trillions of miles. Known as “quantum
entanglement”, it differs radically from some of the other (more abstract) senses
in which everything in the universe is happening “at the same time”.
This
aspect of quantum mechanics has for a century-odd been one of the most
contested but the 2022 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to three scientists
who designed experiments which tested the theories, their results contradicting
Einstein and discovering the seriously weird phenomenon of quantum
teleportation. Quantum entanglement is a
process in which two or more quantum particles are in some way connected so any
change in one causes a simultaneous change in the other, even if they are
separated by vast distances. Indeed
those distances could stretch even to infinity.
Einstein was one of many physicists not convinced and he didn’t like the
implications, calling the idea “spooky action at a distance” and preferred to
think the particles contained certain hidden variables which had already
predetermined their states. This was
neat and avoided the need for any teleportation. However, what the 2022 Nobel Laureates found
that the fabric of the universe should be visualized as a sea of wave-like particles
that affect each other instantaneously, distance as conventionally measured
being irrelevant. What that seems to
mean is that nothing has to travel between the two particles (the speed of
light therefore not a limitation) because the two are in the same place and
that place is the universe. The English
physicist Sir Arthur Eddington (1882–1944) was surely correct when he remarked “…not only is the universe queerer than we
imagine, it is queerer than we can imagine.”
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