Gorp (pronounced gawrp)
(1) Greedily
to eat (obsolete).
(2) A
mixture of nuts, raisins, dried fruits seeds and such, often packed as a
high-energy snack by hikers, climbers and others undertaking strenuous outdoor
activities.
(3) By
extension, in the slang of late 1950s US automobile stylists (and subsequently
their critics), the notion of adding many design elements to a car, even if
discordant.
(4) In
fashion criticism, an adoption of the automotive use, used to describe an
excessive use of decorative items, especially if loosely fitted and inclined to
“stray”.
Early
1900s: Of uncertain origin (in the sense of “greedily to eat”) but assumed by
most etymologists to be a merging of gorge & gulp, the construct being
gor(p) + (gul)p. The mid-fourteenth century
verb gorge (to eat with a display of
greediness, or in large quantities) was from the Middle English gorgen (greedily to eat) and was from
the Old French gorger & gorgier (which endures in modern French as
gorger (greedily to eat; to gorge)),
from gorge (throat). The Middle English noun gorge (esophagus, gullet; throat; bird's crop; food in a hawk's
crop; food or drink that has been take consumed) came directly from the Old
French gorge (throat) (which endures
in modern French as gorge (throat;
breast)), from the Vulgar Latin gorga
& gurga, from the Classical Latin
gurges (eddy, whirlpool; gulf; sea),
of uncertain origin but perhaps linked with the primitive Indo-European gwerhs- (to devour, swallow; to eat). The English word was cognate with the Galician
gorxa (throat), the Italian gorga & gorgia (gorge,
throat (ravine long obsolete)), the Occitan gorga
& gorja, the Portuguese gorja (gullet, throat; gorge) and the Spanish
gorja (gullet, throat; gorge). The duality of meaning in French meant the
brassiere (bra) came to be called “un soutien-gorge
(with derived forms such as “soutien-gorge
de sport” (sports bra) with “soutif”
the common colloquial abbreviation; the literal translation was thus “throat
supporter” but it’s better understood as “chest uplifter”.
The mid-fifteenth century noun gulp (eagerly (and often noisily) to swallow; swallow in large draughts; take down in a single swallow) was from the Middle English gulpen and probably from the West Flemish or Middle Dutch gulpen &, golpen, of uncertain origin. Although not exactly onomatopoeic, the word may have been of imitative origin, or even an extension of meaning of the Dutch galpen (to roar, squeal) or the English galp & gaup (to gape). It was related to the German Low German gulpen (to gush out, belch, gulp), the West Frisian gjalpe, gjalpje & gjealpje (to gush, spurt forth), the Danish gulpe & gylpe (to gulp up, disgorge), the dialectal Swedish glapa (to gulp down) and the Old English galpettan (to gulp down, eat greedily, devour). The derived senses (to react nervously by swallowing; the sound of swallowing indicating apprehension or fear) may have been in use as early as the sixteenth century. Gorp is a noun; the noun plural is gorps. In fashion (technically perhaps “anti-fashion appropriated by fashion”) “gorpcore” describes the use as streetwear of outerwear either designed for outdoor recreation (in the sense of hiking, wilderness tracking etc) or affecting that style. Exemplified by the ongoing popularity of the puffer jacket, gorpcore is something much associated with the COVID-19 pandemic but the look had by the time of the outbreak already been on-trend for more than a year. The name comes from the stereotypical association of trail mix (gorp) with such outdoor activities. The verbs gorping and gorped (often as “gorped-up”) were informal and used among stylists and critics when discussing some of Detroit’s excessively ornamented cars of the late 1950s & early 1960s. Acronym Finder lists eleven GORPs including the two for trail-mix which seem peacefully to co-exist:
GORP: Great
Outdoor Recreation Pages (a website).
GORP: Good
Old Raisins and Peanuts (trail mix).
GORP: Granola,
Oats, Raisins, and Peanuts (trail mix).
GORP: Garry
Ork Restoration Project (An ecosystem restoration project in Saanich, Canada,
designed to save the endangered Garry Oak trees, British Columbia’s only native
oak species.
GORP: Georgia
Outdoor Recreational Pass (Georgia Wildlife Resources Division).
GORP: Graduate
Orthodontic Residents Program (University of Michigan; Ann Arbor).
GORP: Grinnell
Outdoor Recreation Program (Grinnell College, Iowa)
GORP: Good
Organic Retailing Practices.
GORP: Get
Odometer Readings at the Pump.
GORP: Gordon
Outdoor Recreation Project (Gordon College, Wenham, Massachusetts).
GORP: Growing
Outdoor Recreation Professionals (University of California, Berkeley).
Lexicographers
acknowledge the uncertainty of origin in the use of “gorp” to describe the mix
of nuts, raisins, seeds and such in the packaged, high-energy snack now often
known by the description most common in US commerce: “Trail mix”. So common and conveniently packaged are the
ingredients of gorp that doubtlessly variations of the combination have been
carried by travellers since the origins of human movement over distance but the
first known references to the concept to appear in print were seen in the
“outdoors” themed magazines of the early twentieth century. Deconstructed however, the notion of
“high-energy, long-life, low volume” rations were for centuries a standard part
of a soldier’s rations with different mixes used by land-based or naval forces,
something dictated by availability and predicted rates of spoilage; as early as
the seventeenth century, recommended combinations appeared in military manuals
and quartermaster’s lists. Not until the
mid-1950s however is there any record of the stuff being described as “gorp”
although the oft quoted formations: “Good
Old Raisins and Peanuts” & “Granola,
Oats, Raisins, and Peanuts” may both be backronyms.
In various places around the planet, similar concoctions (the
composition influenced by regional tastes and product availability) were
described by different names including the antipodean scroggin or schmogle (the
latter apparently restricted to New Zealand) and beyond the English-speaking
world, there’s been a myriad of variants among those in schools or universities
including “student mix”, “study mix”, “student fodder” & “student oats”. That variety has faded as US linguistic
imperialism has exerted its pull and even before the internet attained critical
mass, the product name familiar in US supermarkets and grocery stores had begun
to prevail: “Trail mix”.
Packaged gorp and trail mix. Historically, gorp bars lived up to their name, a typical ingredients list including "peanuts, corn syrup, rasins, salt & lecithin" so commercially available gorp often was "the truth if not the whole truth". Oddly, even when manufactured in disk-shapes, the product still tended to be described as a "bar". With the contents of trail mix, there's been a bit of "mission creep" and the packaged product can now include chunks of chocolate and other stuff not envisaged in years gone by.
1958 Buick Special Convertible (left) and 1958 Buick Limited Convertible (right).If asked to nominate one from the list of usual suspects, many might pick Cadillac as the most accomplished purveyor of gorp but historians of the breed usually list the 1958 Buicks as "peak gorp" and for the sheer number and variety of decorative bits and pieces, it probably is unsurpassed. Unfortunately for the division, a combination of circumstances meant between 1956 & 1958, Buick sales more than halved and while "excessive" gorp wasn't wholly to blame, after GM (General Motors) re-organized things, gorp never made a comeback quite as lavish.
In
automotive styling “gorp” is not synonymous with “bling” although there can be
some physical overlap. The word “bling”
long ago enjoyed the now obsolete meaning “a want of resemblance” but in modern
use it means (1) expensive and flashy jewelry, clothing, or other possessions,
(2) the flaunting of material wealth and the associated lifestyle or (3) flashy;
ostentatious. It seems in these senses
first to have been recorded in 1997 and is thought to be from the Jamaican
English slang bling-bling, a sound
suggested by the quality of light reflected by diamonds. In the Caribbean, bling-bling came to be used
to refer to flashy items (originally jewelry but later of any display of
wealth) and the term was picked up in the US in African-American culture where
it came to be associated with rap & hip-hop (forks of that community’s pop
music) creators and their audiences. There
were suggestion the word bling was purely onomatopoeic (a vague approximation
of pieces of jewelry clinking together) but most etymologists list it as one of
the rare cases of a silent onomatopoeia: a word imitative of the imaginary
sound many people “hear” at the moment light reflects off a sparkling
diamond. The long obsolete meaning “a
want of resemblance” came from earlier changes in pronunciation when
dissem′blance became pronounced variously as dissem′bler and dissem′ bling with
bling becoming the slang form. There is
no relationship with the much older German verb blinken (to gleam, sparkle).
1958 Continental Mark III by Lincoln.
Some critics of design insist "gorp" (like "bling") really applies only to stuff "added on" (ie glued, screwed, bolted etc) but some claim there's no better word when discussing the cars which were a "mash-up" of disparate elements and there's no better example than the Ford Motor Company's (FoMoCo) 1958 Continental which was actually a "Lincoln with more stuff" but named simply "Continental" in the hope it would fool people into thinking it was an exclusive line following the genuinely unique Continental Mark II (1956-1957). The Continental division had however been shuttered as another victim of the recession and the propaganda proved unequal to reality. The Mark III's huge body (a remarkable technical achievement because even the convertibles were unit-bodies with no separate chassis) lingered for three dismally unsuccessful seasons and remains as the period's most confused agglomeration of motifs, a reasonable achievement given some of the weird creations Chrysler would release. Although the sheer size does somewhat disguise the clutter, as one's eye wanders along the length, one finds slants and different angles, severe straight-lines, curves soft and sudden, scallops, fins and strakes. On McMansions, it's not uncommon to find that many architectural traditions in on big suburban house but it's a rare count in one car. Despite the diversity, it's not exactly "post-modernism in metal" so even if a re-purposing, "gorp" seems to fit.
In the English-speaking world, bling & bling-bling began to appear in dictionaries early in the twenty-first century. Many languages picked up bling & bling-bling unaltered but among the few localizations were the Finnish killuttimet and the Korean beullingbeulling (블링블링) and there was also the German blinken (to blink, flashing on & off), a reference to the gleam and sparkle of jewels and precious metals. Blinken was from the Low German and Middle Low German blinken, from the root of blecken (to bare) and existed also in Dutch. As viral-words sometimes do, bling begat some potentially useful (and encouraged) derivations including blingesque, blingtastic, blingbastic blingiest, blingest, a-bling & blingistic; all are non-standard forms and patterns of use determine whether such pop-culture constructs endure. Bling & blinger are nouns, blinged, blingish, blingy & blingless are adjectives, bling-out, blinged-out & bling-up are verbs; the noun plural is blingers (bling and bling-bling being both singular & plural).
Gingerbread: 1974 Imperial LeBaron four-door hardtop (left) in chestnut tufted leather though not actually “fine Corinthian leather” which was (mostly) exclusive to the Cordoba (1975-1983) until late 1975 when not only did the Imperial's brochures mention "genuine Corinthian leather (available at extra cost)" but for the first time since 1954 the range was referred to as the "Chrysler Imperial", a harbinger the brand was about to be retired. Imperial's advertising copy noted of the brochure photograph above: “...while the passenger restraint system with starter interlock is not shown, it is standard on all Imperials.”; the marketing types didn't like seat-belts messing up their photos. While all of the big three (GM, Ford & Chrysler) had tufted interiors in some lines, it was Chrysler which displayed the most commitment to the gingerbread motif. After 1958, exterior gorp, while it didn't every entirely go away, it did go into decline but in the mid 1960s, as increasingly elaborate and luxurious interiors began to appear in the higher-priced models of even traditionally mass-market marques, those who disapproved of this latest incarnation of excess needed a word which was both descriptive and dismissive. The use "gorp" might have been misleading and according to the authoritative Curbside Classic (which called the trend the start of "the great brougham era"), the word of choice was "gingerbread" and truly that was bling's antecedent.
In the stylists’ (they weren’t yet “designers”) studios in the 1950s, what would come to be called “bling” certainly existed (and in the “age of chrome” was very shiny) but the idea of gorp was different in that it was quantitative and qualitative, the notion of adding to a design multiple decorative elements or motifs, even if this meant things clashed (which sometimes they did). Why this happened has been debated but most historians of the industry have concluded it was the result of the unexpected, post-war boom which delivered to working and middle-class Americans a prosperity and wealth of consumer goods the like of which no mass-society had ever known. In material terms, “ordinary” Americans (ie wage and salary earners), other than in measures like the provision of servants or hours of leisure, were enjoying luxuries, conveniences and an abundance unknown even to royalty but a few generations earlier. Accordingly, noting the advice that the way to “avoid gluts was to create a nation of gluttons” (a concept used also in many critiques of rampant consumerism), the US car industry, awash with cash and seeing nothing in the future but endless demand, resolved never to do in moderation what could be done in excess and as well as making their cars bigger and heavier, began to use increasing rococo styling techniques; wherever there appeared an unadorned surface, the temptation was to add something and much of what was added came casually to be called “gorp”, based on the idea that, like the handy snack, the bits & pieces bolted or glued on were a diverse collection and, in the minds of customers, instantly gratifying. Gorp could include chrome strips, fake external spare tyre housings, decorative fender and hood (bonnet) accessories which could look like missiles, birds of prey in flight or gunsights, the famous dagmars, fake timber panels, moldings which recalled the shape of jet-engine nacelles, taillights which resembled the exhaust gasses from the rockets of spacecraft (which then existed mostly in the imagination) and more.
Had any one of these items been appended as a feature it might well have become a focus or even an admired talking point but that wasn’t the stylistic zeitgeist and in the studios they may have been reading the works of the poet Matthew Arnold (1822-1888) who attributed to Benjamin Disraeli (1804–1881; UK prime- minister 1868 & 1874-1880) a technique he claimed the prime-minister adopted during his audiences with Victoria (1819–1901; Queen of the UK 1837-1901): “Everyone likes flattery and when you come to royalty, you should lay it on with a trowel”. Detroit in the late 1950s, certainly laid on the gorp with a trowel and the men and women (there was in the era the odd woman employed in the studios, dealing typically with interiors or color schemes) were students also of the pamphlet Ending the Depression Through Planned Obsolescence, published in 1932 by US real estate broker (and confessed Freemason) Bernard London (b circa 1873 but his life is something of a mystery) and in the post-war years came the chance to put the theory to the test. This meant not only was there much gorp but each year there had to be “different” gorp so the churn rate was high. Planned obsolescence began as a casual description of the techniques used in advertising to stimulate demand and thus without the negative connotations which would attach when it became part of the critique of materialism, consumerism and the consequential environmental destruction. Like few before or since, the US car industry quickly perfected planned obsolescence and not content with “annual model changes” sometimes added “mid-season releases” thus rendering outdated something purchased only months earlier. Unfortunately, just as “peak gorp” began with the release late in 1957 (replete with lashings of chrome and much else) of the 1958 ranges, an unexpected and quite sharp recession struck the American economy and a new mood of austerity began. That would pass because the downturn, while unpleasant, was by the standard of post-war recessions, relative brief although the effects on the industry would be profound, structurally and financially.
Not all "added-on" stuff can however be classed as "gorp", "bling" or "gingerbread" and the most significant threshold is "functionalism"; if stuff actually fulfils some purpose, it's just a fitting. Thus the additional stuff which appeared on the 1970 Plymouth AAR ’Cuda (and the companion Dodge Challenger T/A) were “fittings” because they all fulfilled some purpose, even if the practical effect away from race tracks was sometimes marginal. Added to the pair was (1) a fibreglass hood (bonnet) with functional air-intake scoop, (2) front and rear spoilers, (3) side outlet dual exhaust system, (4) hood locking pins and (5) staggered size front & rear wheels. Of course, there were also “longitudinal strobe stripes” which did nothing functional but that seems a minor transgression and in the world of stripes, there have been many worse.
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