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An essay published in *Amar Desh* on April 11, 2026, examines the psychological and cultural dimensions of swearing in contemporary Bangladesh, focusing on how Gen Z has transformed taboo language into a form of protest. The piece discusses the book *July-er Graffiti o Gail Samagra*, describing it as a linguistic and visual record of a turbulent era where language became a weapon of resistance rather than mere communication.

The article situates this linguistic rebellion within the 2024 July uprising, when young people used slang and so-called “gail” expressions to challenge political stagnation and social hypocrisy. Drawing on psychological and sociological theories, it argues that swearing functions as both emotional release and symbolic defiance, reflecting frustration, humor, and solidarity. The essay references thinkers such as Freud, Foucault, and Bourdieu to explain how language can dismantle power structures and express collective dissent.

It concludes that Gen Z’s use of provocative language represents a broader cultural evolution. What was once dismissed as vulgarity has become a creative manifesto of resistance, signaling a generational shift in how truth, identity, and democracy are voiced in Bangladesh.

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