Bunga bunga

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Bunga bunga is a phrase of uncertain origin and various meanings that dates from 1910 and a name for an area of Australia dating from 1852. By 2010 the phrase had gained popularity in Italy and the international press to refer to then-Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's alleged sex parties with prostitutes, which caused a major political scandal in Italy. [1] [2]

Contents

Early use

An 1852 issue of Hogg's Instructor states that "bunga bunga" is the name given by locals to a location near Moreton Bay on the eastern coast of Australia, [3] although this appears to be a mistaken reference to the Bunya-Bunya pine.

In 1910 Horace de Vere Cole, Virginia Woolf, her brother Adrian Stephen and a small group of friends pretended to be the Prince of Abyssinia and his entourage. They obtained permission to visit one of the world's most powerful warships, HMS Dreadnought, in Weymouth, Dorset, in what became known as the Dreadnought hoax. It was reported that each time the Commander showed them a marvel of the ship, they murmured the phrase bunga, bunga! [4] [5] which then became a popular catchphrase of the time. [6] Adrian Stephen had this to say about the phrase:

... one of the newspapers published an interview. I think it was supposed to be with one of the assistants at Clarksons, who professed to know a great deal more than he did, and in particular stated that we used the expression "Bunga-Bunga". Anyhow the words "Bunga-Bunga" became public catchwords for a time, and were introduced as tag in music-hall songs and so forth. Apparently the Admiral was unable to go ashore without having them shouted after him in the streets, and I suppose the other officers were treated in the same way. [7]

Resurgence in Italy

The term "Bunga Bunga" has been closely associated with former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi in recent history. Silvio Berlusconi (2010) cropped.jpg
The term "Bunga Bunga" has been closely associated with former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi in recent history.

A century later, the term bunga bunga became popular again as part of a joke on the internet. [8] [n 1] This joke was then narrated by Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi at his dinner parties (in a version which featured, as prisoners, former ministers from the centre-left opposition party led by Romano Prodi). [9]

This expression was then frequently quoted by the Italian and international press in the run-up to the 2011 investigation surrounding Silvio Berlusconi's child exploitation, where it acquired a quite different meaning as "an orgy involving prostitutes and a powerful leader". The term was allegedly taught to Silvio Berlusconi by Muammar al-Gaddafi, [10] who was also the unwitting originator of the phrase Zenga Zenga.

In Italy in 2010, the term had become "an instant, supposedly hilarious, household expression". [11] Contemporary explanations disagreed on its meaning or perhaps illustrated its reference range. It was said to be "a sort of underwater orgy where nude young women allegedly encircled the nude host and/or his friends in his swimming pool", [12] "an African-style ritual" performed for male spectators by "20 naked young women", [13] or the erotic entertainment of a rich host involving pole dancing and competitive striptease by skimpily clad "women in nurses' outfits and police uniforms", [14] the prize being prostitution for the host. [15] Sabina Began claimed that the phrase was a nickname based on her surname and that she had organized the parties. [16]

Bunga bunga culture sparked a social movement called "Se Non Ora Quando" in 2011, which included street protests. [17]

Writing in 2011, the lexicographer Jonathon Green did not expect the term to make much headway or to last in English. [18]

See also

Notes

  1. The joke had circulated in print with other "nonsense" words for some time, for example in 1996 "mamba" (Ronald P. Hamel; Edwin R. DuBose, eds. (August 1996). Must we suffer our way to death?: cultural and theological perspectives on death by choice. Southern Methodist University Press. p.  26. ISBN   978-0-87074-392-4.) and in 1993 "chi-chi" (Colin Alexander (1 September 1993). God's Adamantine Fate. D.I. Fine. p.  245. ISBN   978-1-55611-371-0.)

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References

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