Dictionary Definition
egghead n : an intellectual (who is bald?)
User Contributed Dictionary
Extensive Definition
In the slang of the United
States, egghead was an anti-intellectual
epithet, directed at
people considered too out-of-touch with ordinary people and too
lacking in realism, common sense, virility, etc. on account of
their intellectual interests. The term egghead reached its peak
currency during the 1950s, when
vice-presidential candidate Richard
Nixon used it against
Democratic Presidential nominee Adlai
Stevenson. It was used by Clinton advisor Paul Begala
in the 2008 presidential campaign to describe Senator Barack
Obama's supporters when he said, "Obama can't win with just the
eggheads and African-Americans." The term is rarely used, having
been replaced in U.S. politics by other anti-intellectual epithets
and socially by terms such as nerd and geek.
Origins
In his Pulitzer
Prize-winning historical essay on American
anti-intellectualism, historian Richard
Hofstadter wrote: "During the campaign of 1952, the country
seemed to be in need of some term to express that disdain for
intellectuals which had by then become a self-conscious motif in
American politics. The word egghead was originally used without
invidious associations, but quickly assumed them, and acquired a
much sharper tone than the traditional highbrow. Shortly after the
campaign was over, Louis
Bromfield, a popular novelist of right-wing political
persuasion, suggested that the word might some day [sic] find its
way into dictionaries as follows:
- "Egghead: A person of spurious intellectual pretensions, often a professor or the protégé of a professor. Essentially confused in thought and immersed in mixture of sentimentality and violent evangelism. A doctrinaire supporter of Middle-European socialism as opposed to Greco-French-American ideas of democracy and liberalism. Subject to the old-fashioned philosophical morality of Nietzsche which frequently leads him into jail or disgrace. A self-conscious prig, so given to examining all sides of a question that he becomes thoroughly addled while remaining always in the same spot. An anemic bleeding heart.
"'The recent election,' Bromfield remarked,
'demonstrated a number of things, not the least of them being the
extreme remoteness of the 'egghead' from the thought and feeling of
the whole of the people'" (Anti-Intellectualism in American Life
[New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1963], pp. 9-10).
In their Dictionary of American Slang (1960; 2nd
supplemented ed. 1975), Harold
Wentworth and Stuart
Berg Flexner cite two earlier meanings of egghead, one
referring to baldness, the other to stupidity. Wentworth and
Flexner note that the meaning under discussion here was "[p]op.
during presidential campaign of 1952 when the supporters of Adlai
Stevenson, Democratic candidate, were called eggheads. Thus orig.
the term carried the connotation of 'politically minded' and
'liberal'; today its application is more general. May have
originated in ref. to the high forehead of Mr. Stevenson or of the
pop. image of an academician" (p. 171).
References
egghead in German: Eierkopf
egghead in Polish: Jajogłowy