English

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Etymology

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From an 1834 minstrel song titled "Ole Zip Coon" about a fictional Black man named Zip Coon. The song stereotypically portrays Zip Coon as unintelligent and incapable of assimilating into white American society.

Noun

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zip coon (plural zip coons)

  1. (US, obsolete, derogatory, offensive, ethnic slur) A Black man.
    • 1858, Big Bear's Adventures and Travels, page 98:
      Arter a while we got done—but it looked like I had bad luck for in sittin' down agin I lik'd to have sot on Barbry's tom cat, which if I had, I shoulder bin like Kurnel Zip Coon's wife who jump'd into a holler log to mash two young panters to deth, and they scratched her so bad she couldn t set down for two munse.
    • 1883, The Century, volume 26, page 613:
      "De gal w'at git ole Brer Jack 'ull git a natchul pacer, sho'. He move mo' one-sideder dan ole Zip Coon, w'ich he rack up de branch all night long wid he nose p'int lak he gwine 'cross."
    • 1886, Hiram H. McLane, The Capture of the Alamo: A Historical Tragedy, in Four Acts, with Prologue, page 85:
      I'm ther old eriginal zip-coon, And that uther coon er sottin' on er rail; And I'm that same old coon What allers war er coon, And that never got er lickin' till yet.
  2. (African-American Vernacular, dated) A Black person who accepts an inferior social status to white people.
    • 2006, Ronald L. Jackson II, Scripting the Black Masculine Body: Identity, Discourse, and Racial Politics in Popular Media, page 26:
      There were many names for the coon stock character. He has been referred to as the urban zip coon, dancing dandy, and, most notably, Sambo, the happy slave.
    • 2009, Nick Tosches, Where Dead Voices Gather, page 2:
      Dixon's "Zip Coon" celebrated such a dandy in 1834, and the engraving on the cover of the sheet music portrayed a zip coon in just such a jacket.
    • 2019, Elizabeth L. Sanderson, Spike Lee's Bamboozled and Blackface in American Culture, page 28:
      George Dixon first portrayed the zip coon in 1834.