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Origin of Phrase "Deckchairs on the Titanic"
Published by: rose 2009-01-08

  • Hello. I have a weblog called Deckchairs on the Titanic at http://www.deckchairs.net. For the life of me, I cannot find the true origination of the phrase. I'd *truly* appreciate your assistance so that I can answer my readers and my fevered brain.


  • Thank you! This is very helpful. It's interesting that there are no earlier origins of the phrase -- is it possible that there is another reference from the pre-70s?


  • Nice and very thorough work. This was a tough question and I'm happy to have a solid answer. Thank you very much!


  • This is the only other page of substance I have found. Though it is only anecdotal, it provides some support to the view that this expression started in the early 1970s (or not much earlier than that, anyway). "Rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic", thread in (May 24 - Jun 9, 1998) Google Groups http://groups.google.com/groups?threadm=35689A1E.BDA39A80%40teleport.com
  • THE EVIDENCE FOR LAMARCK. - Free Online Library::
    But to many critics this is akin to shuffling the deckchairs on the Titanic. Richard Dawkins phrase selfish genes applies particularly to these types of genes.
    http://www.thefreelibrary.com/THE+EVIDENCE+FOR+LAMARCK.-a061182639
    HOME


  • Hello bmensch, The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations (5th Ed. 1999), page 533, lists a quotation from the Washington Post, 16 May 1976, by Rogers Morton, American public relations officer: "I'm not going to rearrange the furniture on the deck of the Titanic." The context, according to the dictionary, was that Morton had lost five of the last six primaries as President Ford's campaign manager. The editor of the forthcoming Yale Dictionary of Quotations (YDQ), Fred Shapiro, noted that the YDQ files listed Morton as the originator of the expression. However, a member of the YDQ staff determined that there was an earlier occurrence of the phrase: '"Administrators [at Lincoln Center] are running around straightening out deck chairs while the Titanic goes down." N.Y. Times, 15 May 1972, p. 34' "RE: Deck chairs on the Titanic - thanks", by Fred Shapiro (08/27/02) Archive of the Law-Lib Electronic Discussion List http://lawlibrary.ucdavis.edu/LAWLIB/August02/0458.html I hope that this puts you and your readers at ease -- or at least demonstrates to them that people have been rearranging deckchairs on the Titanic, or advising the futility of doing so, for more than 30 years! - justaskscott Search strategy: Searched in Oxford Dictionary of Quotations Searched on Google for: "furniture on the deck of the titanic" [Note: The posting by Fred Shapiro is also highly ranked in a Google search for "deck chairs on the titanic".]
  • The Sinking of the Titanic with video and photos::
    imperative (see origin of phrase) for loading lifeboats. The metaphor rearranging the deckchairs on the Titanic, meaning making minor changes when a
    http://3info2u.com/Info_Titanic_Sinking.htm
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  • I got a chance to look at additional quotation books -- and found two others that listed the Morton quotation only. So it does seem that the YDQ people have found an earlier use than the generally accepted origin or popularization.


  • ambiguities : Messages : 5422-5451 of 8068::
    Instead of re-arranging deckchairs on the Titanic, Goldsmith delivered an astonishing piece of the interpretation of the phrase serious consequences in
    http://uk.groups.yahoo.com/group/ambiguities/messages/5422?xm=1&m=e&l=1
    HOME
    Well, I assume that since the Yale and Oxford quotation editors both thought that the origin came in 1976, and that the Yale editor only recently pushed it back to 1972, the concept of arranging chairs or furniture on the deck of the Titanic originates in the 1970s. My initial thought had been: Surely this phrase has been around longer than that! But since I was born not much before 1972, maybe it just seems that way. The subconscious belief is probably something like: "It's been around as long as I can remember (or it's so clever and widely used), therefore it must have always been around." I think that's the trick of a memorable phrase; for instance, some people may think that "axis of evil" was used in World War II (and you never know, maybe it was!). Since it is possible that the phrase pre-dates the 70s, I will give it another look on the Internet. In addition, at some point I might be at the large library in my area, and browse through their quotation books to see if an earlier quotation shows up.





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