Johntm Senior Member United StatesRegistered users can see my Skype Name Joined 5424 days ago 616 posts - 725 votes Speaks: English* Studies: Spanish
| Message 9 of 13 26 February 2010 at 5:37am | IP Logged |
canada38 wrote:
I'm not a Feminist of any sorts, but if I were, I would look for something better to
complain about than how a language works. |
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I imagine most feminists would complain about this.
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genini1 Senior Member United States Joined 5470 days ago 114 posts - 161 votes Speaks: English* Studies: German, Mandarin, Japanese
| Message 10 of 13 26 February 2010 at 6:55am | IP Logged |
Johntm wrote:
canada38 wrote:
I'm not a Feminist of any sorts, but if I were, I would look for something better to
complain about than how a language works. |
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I imagine most feminists would complain about this. |
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It's like an Escher painting complaining about complaining about complaining. On a side note how do feminists view languages with gender actually used in the language like how Madchen in German is neuter and a hammer is masculine.
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lynxrunner Bilingual Triglot Senior Member United States crittercryptics.com Joined 5924 days ago 361 posts - 461 votes Speaks: English*, Spanish*, French Studies: Russian, Swedish, Haitian Creole
| Message 11 of 13 26 February 2010 at 12:45pm | IP Logged |
genini1 wrote:
On a side note how do feminists view languages with gender actually
used in the language like how Madchen in German is neuter and a hammer is
masculine. |
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The 'gender' in those languages is arbitrary, as far as I can tell (to the point that
it changes between closely related languages; look at 'milk' in Spanish and 'milk' in
Portuguese, French, and Italian). Sometimes it has to do with how a noun ends (Russian)
and other times it's more of a memorizing game (Romance languages). Some people have
tried to find correlations between the gender of a noun and its
size/strength/prettiness/whatever, but I haven't found any good conclusive theory up
until now. Most feminists that understand this probably wouldn't care. There are always
small fringe groups that want something odd, but I suspect that most feminists would
not be concerned with this.
I can't tell what you, say, Hindi or Russian or Spanish feminists have to say on the
issue of language gender... gender is much more deeply rooted in those languages than
in English, from what I can tell. In Russian, you cannot conjugate the past tense
without revealing someone's gender. In Hindi, you can't conjugate the present tense
without revealing someone's gender. In Spanish, you can't use adjectives without
revealing someone's gender. I have seen some roundabout ways to get past this (in
Spanish, you could say "Latin@" if you want to refer to Latinos and Latinas). I don't
read anything about this in Hindi, Russian, or Spanish.
If you're honestly interested, I could find this article about how the Spanish deal
with the subject of gender for professional names (Businessman vs Business woman, actor
vs actress) compared to the Italians.
Also, could we please prevent this thread from turning into a political debate? I can
see it taking turns towards that. You lot can always discuss feminism somewhere else.
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Johntm Senior Member United StatesRegistered users can see my Skype Name Joined 5424 days ago 616 posts - 725 votes Speaks: English* Studies: Spanish
| Message 12 of 13 27 February 2010 at 7:33am | IP Logged |
lynxrunner wrote:
If you're honestly interested, I could find this article about how the Spanish deal
with the subject of gender for professional names (Businessman vs Business woman, actor
vs actress) compared to the Italians.
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Could you find it for me? That would be awesome.
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The Blaz Senior Member Canada theblazblog.blogspotRegistered users can see my Skype Name Joined 5602 days ago 120 posts - 176 votes Speaks: English* Studies: Spanish, Swahili, French, Sign Language, Esperanto
| Message 13 of 13 27 February 2010 at 7:44am | IP Logged |
In the book 'The Story of French' there's an interesting discussion about feminizing
profession names, and the resistance to any new changes, including from the female head
of the French Academy.
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