Excessive concern with propriety and respectability; strict adherence to conventional moral standards often perceived as rigid, prudish, or hypocritical.
From Mrs. Grundy, the prudish character in Thomas Morton's 1798 play 'Speed the Plough,' plus the suffix -ism (a doctrine or practice). The term became popular in the 19th century to critique excessive moralism.
Grundyism shows how one fictional character became so culturally famous that her name turned into a word meaning an entire philosophy—imagine if your character became a real dictionary term!
Grundyism derives from Mrs. Grundy, an 18th-century fictional character symbolizing rigid moral conformity and social censorship. The term feminized prudishness and social control, projecting gatekeeping behavior onto a woman figure.
When referencing rigid moral enforcement, use 'puritanical gatekeeping' or 'moral conformity' to avoid gendering the problem as a feminine vice.
["puritanical conformity","moral gatekeeping","rigid conservatism"]
Recognize that fictional female characters have historically embodied social critique; Mrs. Grundy was a literary device through which men projected anxieties about female judgment.
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