Elephant in the room

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The elephant in the room (also elephant in the living room, elephant in the corner, elephant on the dinner table, elephant in the kitchen, and horse in the corner) is an English idiom for an obvious truth that is being ignored or goes unaddressed. It is based on the idea that an elephant in a small room would be impossible to overlook.

It is sometimes used to refer to a question or problem that is obvious, but which is ignored out of embarrassment or taboo. The idiom also implies a value judgment that the issue ought to be discussed openly.

The term is often used to describe an issue that involves a social taboo, such as racism or religion, which everyone understands to be an issue but which no one is willing to admit.

The idiom is commonly used in addiction recovery terminology to describe the reluctance of friends and family of an addicted person to discuss the person's problem, thus aiding the person's denial.

The idiom is also occasionally invoked as a "pink elephant", possibly in reference to alcohol abuse, or for no other reason than that a pink elephant would be more visible than a normal elephant.

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[edit] Film

The title of Alan Clarke's 1989 short television film Elephant was a reference to this phrase. The elephant in the room in this case was The Troubles in Northern Ireland. In an attempt to illustrate the core of the problem, Clarke's film stripped away all dialogue and plot, and was essentially a series of unrelated shootings.[1]

Gus Van Sant's 2003 film Elephant, which is named after the Clarke film, places the idiom in the context of a Columbine-style high school shooting—although this was apparently inadvertent, as Van Sant apparently believed Clarke was referring to the fable of the blind men and an elephant, each perceiving a different object.[2]

In the film Elephants Dream, the two main characters appear to exist in a vast machine. The elephant in the room is that the machine appears to be perceived solely by one character and may not actually exist.[citation needed]

[edit] Television

On the TV quiz show QI, a feature of Series E was the "Elephant in the Room" bonus, in which the answer to one (or sometimes more than one) question concerned an elephant.

Richard Dawkins describes religion as "the elephant in the room" in his television series The Root of All Evil?:[3]

... as we wake up to this huge challenge to our civilised values, don't let's forget the elephant in the room. The elephant called religion.

[edit] Music

Fat Joe's 2008 Album is titled "The Elephant in the Room"

[edit] Literature

Political columnist Ryan Sager entitled his book about the conflict between the Christian right and Libertarians for control of the United States' Republican Party "The Elephant in the Room," a play on both the English idiom and the Republicans' elephant symbol.

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