By Jessica Zafra
EVERY YEAR the Oxford Dictionaries declare a Word of the Year, and this year it鈥檚
. Not 鈥渇ace with tears of joy,鈥 which is the official name of that emoji, or 鈥渆moji,鈥 the digital icon used to express emotion in text messages, but the pictograph of a weeping smiley face.
is said to be 鈥渢he word that best reflected the ethos, mood, and preoccupations of 2015.鈥 It won over competitors that included 鈥渟haring economy,鈥 鈥渞efugee,鈥 and my favorite, 鈥渓umbersexual鈥 鈥 one who cultivates the look and manner of dress of the rugged outdoorsy woodsy profession 鈥 and presumably other emojis (
, you鈥檙e so 2005). We don鈥檛 know if 鈥pabebe鈥 was on the long list.
That鈥檚 right, the Word of the Year isn鈥檛 even a word.
For years we in publishing have dreaded the demise of the printed word, and now it鈥檚 official. Our devolution from 鈥渨riters and editors鈥 to 鈥渃ontent-providers鈥 is complete. Now that the worst has happened, it鈥檚 not so bad. It鈥檚 actually made our lives easier. No longer do we have to agonize over the exact turn of phrase to describe someone鈥檚 emotional state. Those style dictators Strunk & White have always told us to omit needless words. You can鈥檛 get more concise than
.
Just as the Paleo Diet preaches a return to the eating habits of hunter-gatherers before evil, evil agriculture, emojis encourage us to revert to the modes of expression of cave painters. Although the bison of Altamira probably didn鈥檛 get emotional.
How many generations of students might have been spared the reams of tortuous prose with which Dostoevsky captured his protagonist鈥檚 guilt, or the miles of insomnia-curing paragraphs with which Proust described how he went to bed early. Granted, their lives would鈥檝e been drearier and less worth living, but they would鈥檝e had more time for other things, like staring at the wall until it was time for dinner, or drinking themselves to death. Consider the opening sentence of Tolstoy鈥檚 Anna Karenina: 鈥淎ll happy families are alike; each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.鈥 



But I鈥檓 wasting time, as word people always do. We鈥檙e in the thick of the Digital Age where the ability to express a thought the millisecond it occurs to you trumps depth, complexity and the boring stuff. On the bright side,
and its brethren give me more time to produce the retro, irrelevant longform writing that gives me reason to live. I declare dibs on the word 鈥渙bso-lit.鈥