Gendered pronouns
Jan. 23rd, 2013 03:12 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
In my recent post about a story of someone going to a job interview, I chose to use female pronouns for both the applicant and the boss, even though I think the original story I heard used "he".
FWIW, I don't remember where I heard the story, but it was presented as a parable, not a factual account, and the extent of the checking I did was to look on snopes, who didn't cite an original incident, so I assumed it was basically generic. At least one friend reckoned they DID have a citation for the original incident, in which case I should have used whichever gender was appropriate. But I was treating it as a generic "story about something that might have happened".
In fact, I don't know for sure the version I heard used "he". It might have used "they", or even named a specific person as the interviewer or the candidate. And I unfortunately probably wouldn't have remembered the difference.
But I make an effort to make generic stories using female characters if I can, because if I don't I end up using "he" all the time.
I hesitated a bit this time, because I wasn't sure if I'd accidentally send some _other_ message (would people think women less likely to be "one of the boys" at a job interview? more likely to be picky about some obscure point of etiquette?). But I always hesitate in case the connotations are wrong (eg. using a non-white-male as a villain or incompetent in a story), but decided that if I didn't do it every time I wasn't sure, I'd just be promoting "he" as the default, which is what I wanted to avoid.
And fortunately, the story seemed to come across exactly the same.
Using mixed or neutral gender pronouns is a small improvement, and something I feel bad that I decided to do, rather than something I always did automatically. But I know I don't notice when other people make small stylistic choices like that, so for once I thought I'd point it out.
FWIW, I don't remember where I heard the story, but it was presented as a parable, not a factual account, and the extent of the checking I did was to look on snopes, who didn't cite an original incident, so I assumed it was basically generic. At least one friend reckoned they DID have a citation for the original incident, in which case I should have used whichever gender was appropriate. But I was treating it as a generic "story about something that might have happened".
In fact, I don't know for sure the version I heard used "he". It might have used "they", or even named a specific person as the interviewer or the candidate. And I unfortunately probably wouldn't have remembered the difference.
But I make an effort to make generic stories using female characters if I can, because if I don't I end up using "he" all the time.
I hesitated a bit this time, because I wasn't sure if I'd accidentally send some _other_ message (would people think women less likely to be "one of the boys" at a job interview? more likely to be picky about some obscure point of etiquette?). But I always hesitate in case the connotations are wrong (eg. using a non-white-male as a villain or incompetent in a story), but decided that if I didn't do it every time I wasn't sure, I'd just be promoting "he" as the default, which is what I wanted to avoid.
And fortunately, the story seemed to come across exactly the same.
Using mixed or neutral gender pronouns is a small improvement, and something I feel bad that I decided to do, rather than something I always did automatically. But I know I don't notice when other people make small stylistic choices like that, so for once I thought I'd point it out.
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Date: 2013-01-23 03:39 pm (UTC)I had this idea of making something that would pick a random name based on a list of baby names. Unfortunately I think the risk of picking "Mohammed" at the wrong time is sufficiently high that the project may be a non-starter.
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Date: 2013-01-23 04:42 pm (UTC)By which I mean, yes, I guess using the "wrong" (that is steryotype confirming) wossname can indeed provoke annoyance; but obviously there are times when you are talking about a specific person and so you need to do so. I think "this wasn't my unconcious prejudice it was my RNG" is a perfectly good defense; although not quite as good as "this was a story about a specific actual person who actually has this attribute".
On the topic of "people not noticing" an author whose blog I read once complained (sorry I forget who) of an angry reader ranting that her books were "promoting homosexuality"; turns out that sometimes when you write a woman thinking lustful thoughts about men some people fail to spot/properly internalise "this is a woman's thoughts we are seeing here" that they read that as gay.
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Date: 2013-01-23 04:49 pm (UTC)Oh yes, I thought that was really interesting!
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Date: 2013-01-23 04:42 pm (UTC)LOL, that's awesome.
Although it's still hard to say for sure you're unbiased: it's possible that some combinations would be SO provocative you'd be unable to resist the urge to change them, so NOT doing so could be a small message, even if you haven't changed anything yet.
I decided random was overkill; my writing was sufficiently biased I could make it a lot better by using female generics as often as possible. I should probably make a further effort to be more multicultural: normal pronouns can be used for people from any culture, but there's still the problem that if you use a neutral pronoun, people will still imagine the sort of person they imagine as typical.
And yeah, names would be nice, but have the problems magnified :) Some friends have talked about this in real life, of choosing non-bland but non-provocative names for hypothetical situations in exam questions, etc.
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Date: 2013-01-23 05:29 pm (UTC)Today's exercise in Rule Utilitarianism is to come up with reasons why that anger might even be justifiable.
There seems to be a school of thought on the web that seems to have "strict liability" standards for offense, that intention is entirely irrelevant. Personally I find this to be deeply vexatious, and makes me wonder whether these people are at all interesting in justice, although that may be me taking strongly-worded statements literally when they weren't... intended... that way, so I need to calm down and watch out for my own hypocrisy etc. Also, I can sort of see where they're coming from. Certainly I have a notion of "causing offense by negligence"; possibly someone could come up with a less legalistic phrasing.
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Date: 2013-01-23 08:30 pm (UTC)I think there's a lot of that. I think the trouble is, accidentally causing offence should be rare, but is actually really, really, really common, either because people deliberately can't be bothered to learn better, or because people from different subgroups meet and genuinely don't know each others' norms. So if "I didn't mean it" was a defence, everyone would just go on doing the same thing, and ALWAYS say "I didn't mean it", glossing over whether or not they SHOULD have learned better.
So people who are constantly being insulted naturally develop the assumption that if someone didn't mean it, that's just because they're being wilfully negligent. And would accept that yes, when someone GENUINELY had no way to know, that's ok, but assume that's only a weird edge case, not something that actually happens.
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Date: 2013-01-23 09:10 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-01-23 09:38 pm (UTC)(I'm hoping I can say that in the abstract without anyone perceiving it applies specifically to them or a demographic to which they belong…)
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Date: 2013-01-24 09:52 am (UTC)Of course, in the latter case, some hypothetical person could say, or rather couldn't say, but could think, "yeah, tell me about it".
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Date: 2013-01-24 11:20 am (UTC)I also think it is reasonable to respond to someone accidentally hurting me by saying "please try not to hurt me or other people again"; even when it was all entirely accidental. Also I think that since with verbally inflicted pain the excuse is often a genuine "I had no idea that would hurt you" it is more important to say "that hurt, please don't" because otherwise how would the hurter learn not to cause further hurt?
Also there is an argument for negligence. How many times do I say "please, that really hurts, don't do it" before you either stop doing it or admit that you are intentionally hurting me? And yes, sometimes it hurts to be told "you are hurting me"; but I am reasonably happy to inflict this pain as part of a process that leads to no-one hurting people.
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Date: 2013-01-24 11:59 am (UTC)Now expressions of blame - for example, anger directed at the person causally responsible for the offense, perhaps involving hurtful words themselves - are interesting. My first instinct is to get on my high horse and say this is entirely unjustifiable. However... well, I linked to an Adam Smith quote elsewhere in this discussion. The idea of moral luck, of blameworthiness that can be dropped on you from a great height, is one that I really dislike. But I find that the position up on my high horse is uncomfortable for various reasons, so it's something I'm trying to make sense of.
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Date: 2013-01-24 12:10 pm (UTC)Also it seems that sometimes it is simply impossible to tell someone "that thing you said hurt me" in a way that is both sufficiently polite that they themselves are not hurt and ALSO sufficiently clear that they understand that they hurt me.
Inflicting pain in response for pain might be a learning tool in some cases; although I'm not sure it is the BEST teaching tool at hand.
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Date: 2013-01-24 02:02 pm (UTC)