Fist bump

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A fist bump

A fist bump (also called power five,[1] dap, fist pound, touch, or brofist) is a gesture similar in meaning to a handshake or high five. A fist bump can also be a symbol of giving respect. It can be followed by various other hand and body gestures and may be part of a dap greeting. It is commonly used in baseball and hockey as a form of celebration with teammates, and with opposition players at the end of a game. In cricket it is a common celebratory gesture between batting partners.

Definition

Merriam Webster Dictionary: a gesture in which two people bump their fists together (as in greeting or celebration)[2]

The gesture is performed when two participants each form a closed fist with one hand and then lightly tap the front of their fists together. The participant's fists may be either vertically oriented (perpendicular to the ground) or horizontally oriented. Unlike the standard handshake, which is typically performed only with each participants' right hand, a fist bump may be performed with participants using either hand.

The fist bump symbol is informally written in electronic text by using the Japanese katakana alphabet YO, the equals sign and the English capital "E": =ƎE=.[citation needed]

History

According to St. Louis Post-Dispatch columnist Bernie Miklasz, the recent recurrence of the fist bump was brought about by baseball player Stan Musial in the 1950s, who adopted it as a way to avoid picking up germs.[3] Time magazine wonders if it evolved from the handshake and the high-five. They cite knuckle bumping in the 1970s with basketball player Baltimore Bullets guard Fred Carter. Others claim the Wonder Twins, minor characters in the 1970s Hanna-Barbera superhero cartoon Super Friends, who touched knuckles and cried "Wonder Twin powers, activate!" were the originators.[1] However, the "fist bump" or "pound" can easily be traced as far back as the late 1800s and early 1900s to the boxer's handshake as a way to greet when hands are gloved. In fact, the fist bump's origins may well lie in the animal kingdom as the gesture is natural behaviour observed in primates, according to a book published by Margaret Power in 1991.[4]

In early June of 2008, the Fox News Channel ran a news piece about a fist bump of Barack Obama and his wife at the end of one of Obama's meetings in his presidential running. In it, hard news anchor E. D. Hill said the gesture may be a "terrorist fist jab" (implanting an association of Barack Obama with terrorism).[5] Fox later apologized for the term.[6]

In light of the 2009 H1N1 pandemic, the Dean of Medicine at the University of Calgary, Tom Feasby, suggested that the fist bump may be a "nice replacement of the handshake" in an effort to prevent transmission of the virus.[7] Similarly, a medical study has found that fist bumps and high fives spread fewer germs than handshakes.[8][9]

Additional influence came from the early 1900's during Canadian,(Indian River/Kensington, Prince Edward Island), pick up, pond hockey games when it was too awkward to high five your teammate with winter gloves or hockey gloves on, after a goal, a successful scrap or sweet hip check. It was later popularized in the early 1980's, by local, Scarborough Ontario, Canada, organized hockey teams, (Scarborough Chiefs), and not so organized street/neighbourhood hockey teams, (Porchester Bullies). ("I'm, Rick Vive, Mike Palmateer, Mike Bossy or Billy Smith.")

DEW, 2016

Other instances

References

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  4. Power, Margaret (1991). The Egalitarians – Human and Chimpanzee: An Anthropological View of Social Organization. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-40016-3.
  5. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cQfbbSQ5FXY
  6. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gj8oIy6Crrs
  7. Fist bump can pound out flu transmission
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  10. Dr. X's Free Associations, "Photo of the Day: First Documented Knuckle-tap (Dap) Greeting", March 4, 2008
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Further reading

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External links