These days, it seems as if everyone’s talking about gaslighting. In
2022, it was Merriam-Webster’s Word of the Year, on the basis of a
seventeen-hundred-and-forty-per-cent increase in searches for the term.
In the past decade, the word and the concept have come to saturate the
public sphere. In the run-up to the 2016 election, Teen Vogue
ran a viral op-ed with the title “Donald Trump Is Gaslighting America.”
Its author, Lauren Duca, wrote, “He lied to us over and over again, then
took all accusations of his falsehoods and spun them into evidence of
bias.” In 2020, the album “Gaslighter,” by the Chicks (formerly known as
the Dixie Chicks), débuted at No. 1 on the Billboard country
chart, offering an indignant anthem on behalf of the gaslit:
“Gaslighter, denier . . . you know exactly what you did on my boat.”
(What happened on the boat is revealed a few songs later: “And you can
tell the girl who left her tights on my boat / That she can have you
now.”) The TV series “Gaslit” (2022) follows a socialite, played by
Julia Roberts, who becomes a whistle-blower in the Watergate scandal,
having previously been manipulated into thinking she had seen no
wrongdoing. The Harvard Business Review has been publishing a steady stream of articles with titles like “What Should I Do if My Boss Is Gaslighting Me?” Leslie Jamison, The New Yorker
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