|
Register | Sign In |
|
QuickSearch
EvC Forum active members: 47 (9216 total) |
| |
KING IYK | |
Total: 920,531 Year: 853/6,935 Month: 134/719 Week: 126/116 Day: 40/13 Hour: 1/1 |
Thread ▼ Details |
Member (Idle past 7892 days) Posts: 634 From: Washington, USA Joined: |
|
Thread Info
|
|
|
Author | Topic: English, gender and God | |||||||||||||||||||
Mister Pamboli Member (Idle past 7892 days) Posts: 634 From: Washington, USA Joined: |
quote:In my experience, deliberate and conscious sexism, like deliberate and conscious racism, is relatively easy to counter, if not to solve. Taking a clear opposite positon promptly is often enough to deal with the immediate situation - but the long term causes need continuing social change. Ingrained, habitual, attitudes are much more difficult to deal with, but do still need to be dealt with promptly, if only as a form of aversion therapy for the hapless ingrainees ![]() I remember as a child hearing my grandmother's comment on Kenneth Kaunda appearing on television: Isn't he black, the poor soul? In her way, she probably wished him nothing but good. Even at the age of ten, I knew this was something that needed to be countered. It was almost twenty years later that she apologized for punishing me. You don't need me to tell you to fight the good fight, schraf. Better to have one person think you a little rude (and it only appears to be one) than to let it go by without comment.quote:As Austin Powers would say Feel it, baby! Grrrrrrrrr. ![]()
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Mister Pamboli Member (Idle past 7892 days) Posts: 634 From: Washington, USA Joined: |
quote:It's likely because Hain is an English surname, and sounds like one, so we are subconsciously fitting you into our linguistic experience. But don't worry we're not getting at you - it's ingrained, not deliberate. ![]()
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Mister Pamboli Member (Idle past 7892 days) Posts: 634 From: Washington, USA Joined: |
quote:Most everyone has answered it in their own way. I addressed it over 60 posts ago in message 19. Just because you didn't get an answer in the terms you would like, doesn't mean it wasn't answered. The correct answer to an irrelevant question can be to point out its irrelevance; and the trouble is, no one but you thinks your question is in any way relevant to the matter in hand. Further, in over 60 posts you have falied to persuade any of us that it should be. The matter under discussion has nothing to do with a pronoun used in passing of one whose gender is not in question - the issue has to do with attitudes to pronouns used when gender is the very issue at hand. The question you should be asking is more like What pronoun would one use of one when referring to Jaye Davidson's character in The Crying Game?
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Mister Pamboli Member (Idle past 7892 days) Posts: 634 From: Washington, USA Joined: |
quote:So you go with Sapir-Whorf on this one? Very curious.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Mister Pamboli Member (Idle past 7892 days) Posts: 634 From: Washington, USA Joined: |
quote:Wouldn't you be claiming that 2 = 2.5? I do hope your logic is better than your arithmetic! ![]() quote:Not if they are unaware that the language they are using is sexist. You seem determined to dance around the point of this particular pin. For my part I am beginning to find it contrived and tiresome. I suspect schraf and crashfrog feel the same way.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Mister Pamboli Member (Idle past 7892 days) Posts: 634 From: Washington, USA Joined: |
quote:This is priceless. Later in the post I asked what pronoun Rh would use to describe an apparent transgender character in a movie. His answer was ... quote:Note the specific ones. Rh's answer is basically the same as an earlier one I gave in post 19 about the pronoun one would use for God: I think they should use the pronoun they prefer. So the answer to all these questions is that one should use, not one specific pronoun, but the pronoun one thinks appropriate. I cannot suggest that one use a specific pronoun about Einstein unless I want to comment on Einstein's gender. The question is in fact an example of a many questions construction - because the real issue would be better phrased as What gender do you believe Einstein to have been, and, given that gender, what pronoun would you suggest one use to refer to him? Thus, Rh's claim that we are avoiding his straightforward question is disingenuous - we are avoiding his misleadingly straightforward question, which hides the issue which is really under discussion. That's what I am getting at.quote:If one sees Einstein as male for whatever reason then the pronoun I would recommend is he. If the person sees Einstein as female for whatever reason, or example this writer http://members.cts.com/king/n/ndanger/980428/einstein.htm, then the pronoun I would recommend is she. See how simple that was? You asked for a pronoun and I gave you the specific ones. quote:Look again. quote:No single word, a choice of words depending on the speaker's view of Einstein's gender - just as in your answer, an approach I commend. quote:I wish I knew why you find it relevant. I'm at a loss to see how one can extrapolate from a usage about Einstein to a usage in a case where a gender pronoun is actually being called into question. quote:No - this was not an argumentum ad populum. An argumentum ad populum would be to claim the truth of the proposition on the basis of the population supporting it. You may be right and we may be wrong - our numbers have nothing to do with it. But the fact that none of us on this thread, except you, believes your question about Einstein to be relevant, explains why no one is answering it. It was answering your question about Einstein that was the subject of that point, not the more general proposition about appropriate pronouns. quote:Absolutely not. Never would. But it does explain why the discussion is going the way it is. quote:When Paul eye-rolled the word She used of God. quote:Actually, he implied my pronoun was wrong. [This message has been edited by Mister Pamboli, 05-15-2003]
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Mister Pamboli Member (Idle past 7892 days) Posts: 634 From: Washington, USA Joined: |
quote:Actually, there was no objection whatsoever to Paul's use of a pronoun - it was Paul's objection to my use that was commented on. quote:You have been answered fully and in some detail by me, at least. It is still beside the point. The relevant questions would be more like If it is clear that two people hold different views about Einstein's gender, what should the reaction of one of them be to the other's usage, and, if that reaction should be critical, how should the other party, in turn, react. I appreciate you might prefer to tackle a reduced subset of these, but unfortunately the tack you are taking is simplistic rather than simplified.quote:I'm sure crash, schraf and I were not surprised. We kinda expect it due to the ingrained sexism of the language, as we see it's effects, and possibly even fall victim to it ourselves, from time to time.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Mister Pamboli Member (Idle past 7892 days) Posts: 634 From: Washington, USA Joined: |
quote:Crahsfrog gives another excellent example of ingrained sexism, as I'm sure crashy won't be in the slightest offended by that, or take it as an accusation. I found myself this morning betraying some surprise that the plumber who came to fix our sauna was, in fact, a woman. Her reaction - of distinct, slight, but tolerant offense - was appropriate and measured, just like schraf's. quote:No sexism in that - but sexism in criticising my usage of She quote:It depends on the reaction, and it depends on the extent to which the user of he is confident of the maleness of the referent, or aware of differing views of the gender of the referrent. If the reaction was It's interesting that you say She. Can you tell me why? there would be no issue. Let's rephrase your question: How is it sexist to refer to what you believe to be males as "he"? And to react negatively when others refer to what you believe to be male as "she"? Doesn't appear quite so reasonable now does it? And then, of course, there is the chosen form of criticism: an eye-roll. There is no OED of body language, but I would be surprised if many here disagreed that an eye-roll in the context it was used implies a prior knowledge of the issue under contention, and it's contentiousness.quote:PronounS. You couldn't answer with one, but had to contextualise the response. Now why was that? Lack of honesty? Lack of integrity? Lack of courage? Or was it not appropriate to give a single pronoun? Perhaps the example could not be reduced to the simplistic level of your Einstein example? You are still trying to reduce this to a simplistic issue. Crashfrog, at the very least, has the intellectual integrity not to oversimplify an issue, nor to be browbeaten into taking a position that could be used to mislead others who may not follow the thread closely.quote:I cannot follow your reasoning here. What do you mean by honored above reality? What is the reality above which crash is honouring a cry of sexism? What on earth has your Einstein example to do with this?
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Mister Pamboli Member (Idle past 7892 days) Posts: 634 From: Washington, USA Joined: |
quote:Exactly. I have observed that in my peer-group it is exclusively males who use man or mankind as encompassing terms, and that this usage rarely goes uncommented upon if women are present. I use the term encompassing rather than neuter because the usages refer to situations where males and females are included. If the terms were truly neuter to my peer group one could use them to refer to groups of females, such as this chemical appeared to cause cancer of the ovaries in Man. This usage stand out as extremely odd in my peer-group, though I am aware of many examples from earlier decades - examples which sound frankly comical today.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Mister Pamboli Member (Idle past 7892 days) Posts: 634 From: Washington, USA Joined: |
quote:My lecturer in English language used to say that as a rule of thumb We write the way our parents talked. As a rough guide it seems to describe what goes on pretty well.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Mister Pamboli Member (Idle past 7892 days) Posts: 634 From: Washington, USA Joined: |
quote:Both, I think. Of course, as he said himself, he wasn't referring to James Joyce, and it wasn't intended as a fully descriptive rule. Sadly, the old guy is dead now, but he was talking in the late 70s when he himself was in his 60s. In the last 25-30 years we have seen very informal writing becoming much more common, on the internet of course, but also in the public prints. Interestingly, though, it doesn't follow speech, but has its own diction and phrasing. Blogs are fascinating to mine for the patterns in informal writing and there is a lot of good work being done on the linguistics of blogs, internet chat and SMS messaging.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Mister Pamboli Member (Idle past 7892 days) Posts: 634 From: Washington, USA Joined: |
quote:Ar you sure you meant to say that? False premises lead nowhere on their own. Only arguments move from one proposition to another. quote:That's true. Except that you seemed to think earlier that words have a certain meaning in reality which is separate from usage. In which case, does not nurse mean in reality a woman who gives suck to a child? Of course, one may argue that usage has removed that bias and moved on from that meaning, with which I would agree. I would argue, then, that just as usage has removed the bias from this term, so usage has ingrained a bias in the use of he. quote:Not in English. Maybe in French, where the Academie attempts to rule what constitutes correct French. Doctor Johnson wished his Dictionary to "fix the language" but admitted eventually that it could not be done. The Oxford has never pretended to more than description. quote:But your examples, reasonable as they are, are of individual usages, not of usages shared amongst a community of users. quote:I like anchovies? I like them like s**t. quote:In what does it exist? What is its mode? How is it manifested? quote:But you also seem to saying that these patterns can change. I am sure no one would disagree with that. The issue at hand is how users should react to usages which are in flux or appear to be in flux. How are we to know, for example, whether a usage is wrong (as you might say) or whether it is simply shifting its meaning. Perhaps Vizzini's overworked inconceivable is taking on a meaning which Inigo is powerless to prevent? How are we to decide if it is Inigo or Vizzini who is wrong? quote:Now you seem to be confusing etymology and meaning - an oversight? Or do you think nurse really means a breastfeeding woman. quote:Because they can use forms such as y'all or youse? Or because they can use simple circumlocutions - such as all of you. quote:Yes I agree. Paul should have done exactly that - sought clarification and we could have moved on.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Mister Pamboli Member (Idle past 7892 days) Posts: 634 From: Washington, USA Joined: |
quote:Correct in the case of Paul, but ... quote:Not really. Remember that schraf is contextualising this in a continuing history of bias. You may want to treat Paul's post as an atomic utterance, devoid of any context, but schraf is entitled to do otherwise. She would have been jumping to a conclusion had she claimed Paul was personally sexist - as the only evidence she had was his post - but she did not do that: she claimed the language had sexism ingrained. quote:And there's the rub: he was rude - it wasn't the challenge, but the dismissive attitude that led to schraf's comment. You yourself have recognized it. All this sidetracking about what Paul sincerely believes and the irrelevant guff about pronouns and Einstein really does distract from the core issue: schraf's assertion that Paul's rude responsewas the result of ingrained sexism in the language.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Mister Pamboli Member (Idle past 7892 days) Posts: 634 From: Washington, USA Joined: |
quote:Fair enough: but no games. Sorry if I got you wrong. I thought you were perhaps discussing traditional logic, in which the truth or falsity of premises is of little interest, but the method of reasoning is paramount. quote:Indeeed it would be, which is why I riased the point. quote:Exactly, the word has evolved two meanings, one of which is strongly gender-specific and the other isn't. The newer meaning of a medical care-giver has evolved by usage. Yet, in an earlier post, you claimed: ... reality trumps usage. The word doesn't mean that no matter how many people think it does. But if this true, then there is no equivocation, for you frequently hint that a word really means what it's etymology implies. If there is equivocation, then it is because usage enables us to move between meanings which are radically different from the implications of the etymology.quote:No games - I am just trying to get a handle on what you are trying to say about language having some sort of platonic form distinct from its usage. quote:Of course one may arbitrarily decide to use a dictionary proscriptively - Scrabble players do it all the time. But the proscription comes from the readers decision to be proscribed to. Dictionaries, unlike languages, have an intentional intelligence behind them, so we can say that the dictionary itself is not proscriptive, even though it may be used in that way. (Do you know the delightful book Cod Streuth by Bamber Gascoine. If not, I recommend it - if I read you right, you would love it. A monk is captured in 1560 by Brazilian cannibals, who think his 10 pages of Rabelais (Book 3: 26-28) are the Bible they have been promised. The monk is made patriarch and rather than admit the error, he attempts to use them to convert the natives using Rabelais. The Passion Play which turns into an orgy is particularly fun.)quote:It can, of course, be justified, within a community of users. If I use the word doubt to mean expect - a fine Scots usage - an Englishman may well raise Inigo's point. After all, I doubt he'll not pay you would have exactly the opposite meaning in one community of users and another. Any such question therefore can only be justified in so far as an assumption can be justified that all in the conversation belong to the same community of users with reference to the word under discussion. Why the latter qualification, with reference to the word under discussion? Because otherwise homogeneous communities of users may have sub-communities with different usages for specific terms.quote:Agreed, as mentioned above. quote:Nice wriggling, but I'm not buying it. There is no derivative of not in here. Think back to what you were saying about Youngquist's poems and how the difference between them was not something the language can tell you. quote:Once! ![]() quote:I disagree. I think there are those who would like there to be such a thing, frequently in pursuit of a social agenda intended to entrench a caste who are entitled to proscribe the activities of others. Your example might well serve to illustrate this. quote:In you second post you say The word is not derived that way but in the first, It doesn't mean that. I get the very clear impression that derivation and meaning are very closely equivalent to you - to the extent that you seem to think that the derivation is somehow the real meaning of a word. Back to nursing again ... ? And there is a reality to usage, too, including definition.quote:Agreed. quote:Well, it may mean that for a community of one user! And that raises the interesting point as to whether language actually does require a community: that is, greater than one user. Would a person raised entirely without communication with any other being have anything that could be called language? quote:Except that such words may make it into a dictionary - in which case, do they become real? Has the dictionary made them real, or were they real beforehand? quote:Not accent, surely? Dialect, perhaps. But the circumlocutions are neither dialect or accent, are they?
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Mister Pamboli Member (Idle past 7892 days) Posts: 634 From: Washington, USA Joined: |
Curious examples Rh chooses to show the common use of the word niggardly today.
The first three are all in the context of budgeting. Two explicitly use the term niggardly budget - one from 60 years ago(!) and one postdating Howard's case which brought the phrase into the public eye. Really all this shows is that niggardly budget may be a cliche in the circle of those who discuss budgeting. Your fourth example is from a web page which is hardly representive of common English usage - for one thing the word niggardly is used here to construct the acronym NAZI and a related acronym NAZM. So we have:a sixty year old example; one use of the exact phrase in question postdating the very public controversy over that phrase; another use in the same context as the phrase in question also postdating the public controversy; a forced example of the word being used to create an acronym in another racially-charged context. Persoanlly, I think the Encarta dictionary gets the issue just right: Although the etymology of niggardly and niggard remains subject to debate, these words probably have a Scandinavian origin not associated historically with the origin of the offensive word Negro and its related offensive racist slurs. These are derived ultimately from Latin. Niggardly, then, is in no way a racial slur. However, the fact that the word sounds as if it might be one is reason to consider context very carefully before using it. As ever, the onus in the natural course of language is on the speaker or writer to take account of their audience or readership, rather than the formalized social niceties built on an idealized view of language that Rh seems to prefer.
|
|
|
Do Nothing Button
Copyright 2001-2023 by EvC Forum, All Rights Reserved
Version 4.2
Innovative software from Qwixotic © 2025