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Genderless/Gender-neutral pronouns, "he", "she", "them" and "they", and broader gender issues in language.

 
  

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w1rebaby
13:16 / 20.11.02
I think "they" has been adopted with plural grammar but singular meaning, to a certain extent, but it's not quite that simple. The acceptability of the term in general seems to rest on the level of definition of the object person. "The passenger is free to do what they want" sounds okay. "Fridge is free to do what they want" doesn't.

I'm now thinking that in the above case it's sort of a plural in meaning, and it's "the passenger" that is the problem. It is grammatically and in certain senses semantically a singular, but really refers to an undetermined member of a large group - "the passenger in any given scenario". (I imagine that there's a term for this but I have no idea what it is.) Compare it to "passengers are free to do what they want" which has the same meaning but is plural all the way through.

Is there an example of "they" being applied to a singular where that singular could not easily be replaced by a plural? If not, couldn't we make Jack happy and just convert our singulars to plurals, or convert the singular to the plural?
 
 
Pepsi Max
14:13 / 20.11.02
Haus>

if you are using "they" as a singular, you really have to start saying "they is/was/does" to maintain clinguistic consistency - rather as "fish" can be singular or plural, but demands grammatical agreement.

I agree there is some tension/confusion using "They" with reference to the singular, but couldn't an analogy be forged with "You". Originally it was second personal plural only. It then replaced "Thou" as second person singular but conjugated verbs retained the plural ending. We say "You are" not "You art".
 
 
Pepsi Max
14:16 / 20.11.02
JF>

"Prior usage" does not a valid argument make

Well, how do languages change then?

The issue is one of intersubjective agreement and negotiation, in which prior usage plays a role.

Unless you would prefer an Academie Anglais.
 
 
ONLY NICE THINGS
14:20 / 20.11.02
Hmmm....but "you" was also another way of working the second person singular long before "thou" went out of use. Also, the third persons singulars "he" and "she" would presumably retain "is" and other singular forms, so...no,I don't think it's the same process. It could inform the process, but...hmmm. How would you see this working? "Are" becoming the standard third-person singular ending?
 
 
ONLY NICE THINGS
14:55 / 20.11.02
Todd - interesting question; but to conceive a different pronoun for ever possible form of gender variance would be political correctness actually gone mad, for a change, surely? On the other hand, people who expressed a particualr form of gender variance might want to coin their own spin on language to go with it, like so many other cultures, but that is more on the level of the kind of specialised vocabulary applied by specific groups than comething with common currency. So, I wouldn't expect an engineer to know offhand what a sistrum or a synecdoche was, and likewise I hope that an engineer (or indeed a gender theorist) would not expect me to know the terms of art of their profession. That's a different set-up to the general usage of an epicene pronoun.

As for potential confusion when the epicene pronoun can be used of a variety of interstitial gender representations, well...yes, if it being expected to make those distinctions. But "she" can refer to a woman or a yacht or an ocean-going liner. "He" can refer to a black man, a white man, a good man, a bad man...and in all of the possible options you have given (pre-operative MTFs, FTMs, penisless FTMs and hermaphrodites), the answer would surely be that none of them actually have to be addressed with the epicene pronoun, *unless they want to be*. Otherwise, they would be addressed by the pronoun of the gender they identify as. So, the epicene pronoun is not a catch-all, but something claimed (in its specific usage, rather than a non-gender specific generic) very specifically only by peopel who want it to describe their alienation from the two available gender options. So, a transgendered person might be "he", then subsequently"she", or they might be "he" at work and "she" at home, or they might be (insert epicene pronoun here), depending on how they want to think of themselves and how they want to present themselves.

So, in that sense I'm afraid we're talking about a very political (in the sense of gender political) action, although perhaps no more political than being a "he" or a "she", just more novel...
 
 
Ethan Hawke
15:38 / 20.11.02
I wonder if there are any languages that use different third person pronouns for "he" and "he, who is not one of us" (different tribe, class, color, etc.). There are certainly different variations on the 2nd person pronoun for addressing different people...
------------------------------
Anyway, as you said, "he" can refer to bunch of different kinds of man - white man, black man, man with a vagina, etc. Upon closer examination, there really is no one quality that is common to everyone who should be called by "he" (except for perhaps that each individual "he" has expressed a desire to be called "he" - however, this really isn't a definition, is it? At this point, meaning is completely and individually arbitrary, rather than arbitrary by group agreement. The meaning of "he" becomes radically private. This isn't meaning endlessly deferred - this is meaning deferred to the individual subject's whims. This seems to me to be doing great violence to the language, which is perhaps what Lawrence finds so objectionable about it.

Since the privatization of language*, I think we would agree, is a bad thing, as it impedes clear communication, and as I think I've pointed out, the meaning of the proposed epicene pronoun is also subject to deferral to personal definition, I think the only solution I can stand is to do away with gendered pronouns altogether- have one third person singular pronoun. If there's no essence to gender, or at least none that can even be tentatively agreed to by all parties concerned, then gendered pronouns are useless as a method of "completing a sense unit." To Lawrence, RuPaul may be a "he", but RuPaul might refer to hirself as a "she." If the meaning of "he" and "she" are so controversial and the usage so idiosyncratic, they become useless.

Furthermore, why should gender be privileged above other individual characteristics - privileged enough to receive it's own markers. Why not different pronouns for race? Why not different pronouns for age bracket? Surely there are some situations where those would make meaning more clear than using he or she.

So, again: It - to be used for people of either, both, neither genders. Or a new coinage.
 
 
some guy
15:49 / 20.11.02
At this point, meaning is completely and individually arbitrary, rather than arbitrary by group agreement. The meaning of "he" becomes radically private. This isn't meaning endlessly deferred - this is meaning deferred to the individual subject's whims. This seems to me to be doing great violence to the language, which is perhaps what Lawrence finds so objectionable about it.

Precisely - I suppose the question you haven't asked is, "Where does it stop?" I don't think the epicene works partly because of the political baggage that would inevitably come with it - it's a default "none of the above." If we are to create new pronouns to handle specific instances of "none of the above," who gets them, and why? This is why I asked how many genders there could be, and think there's a case to be made for the current two broad categories (although I have no problem with calling RuPaul a "she" etc).
 
 
ONLY NICE THINGS
15:53 / 20.11.02
Well, the only immediately obvious answer to "why should pronouns be split along gender lines?" is because they *are*. This may be a hangover from inflected Nordic languages, but it is useful for sense in non-inflected English, and because I rather thought our intention was to do a *minimum* of damage to the English language. If you are proposing that we do away with "he" and "she" altogether, then that's a different question, and an exceptionally radical solution...I'm incresingly thinking that for the moment and within the grounds of probability, an epicene pronoun that supplements the function of "he" and "she" rather than replacing them is the most credible solution.

On:
Anyway, as you said, "he" can refer to bunch of different kinds of man - white man, black man, man with a vagina, etc. Upon closer examination, there really is no one quality that is common to everyone who should be called by "he" (except for perhaps that each individual "he" has expressed a desire to be called "he" - however, this really isn't a definition, is it?

Well, no. They all take the pronoun "he" because they are all men. Yachts I'm less sure about. They may be *male* or *female*, but they are men. Men, that is. Not yachts.
 
 
ONLY NICE THINGS
16:14 / 20.11.02
This is why I asked how many genders there could be, and think there's a case to be made for the current two broad categories .

No doubt. But the mere existence of a case does not mean that there cannot be a case for the current two broad categories, and a third broad category for those who do not fit into the first or second. Which may indded be "political". Could somebody explain how it would be political, in what sense it would be political and what those politics would be, and why it would be a bad thing. Is RuPaul calling herself "she" political? If so, is that a bad thing? if not, why not?

(nb - I believe that there are third-gendered groups in some First Nations groups, including Native American two-spirit people, who are not well-0served by the current dichotonmy. Also the Hijras in India, or the Fafafines in Samoa... Fiore de Henriquez is now a "she", but sounds like she could have used her own linguistic space....)
 
 
Ethan Hawke
16:16 / 20.11.02
Well, no. They all take the pronoun "he" because they are all men. Yachts I'm less sure about. They may be *male* or *female*, but they are men. Men, that is. Not yachts.

This just begs the question - perhaps I should have phrased my original post this way: Upon closer examination, there really is no one quality that is common to everyone who is a man (And thus should be called by "he") (except for perhaps that each individual man thinks that he is a man (and thus expresses a desire to be called "he") - however, this really isn't a definition, is it?

If you want to say that X=man, and that Y=man, shouldn't there be something in common that makes them both men? It's not a penis, it's not a mustache, it's not a good woman standing behind him - what is it? It's not simply "a man is what x is, and x is what a man is", is it? Or to ask another question, can two men be "manly" in two completely different ways? What's the point of calling two people "men" if that word doesn't serve to denote any commonality between them besides the fact that they wish to be referred to as "he?"

Sorry If I'm being incredibly obtuse -
 
 
ONLY NICE THINGS
17:27 / 20.11.02
Not at all. You are drawing attention to the fact that the identifier "man", and the identifier "woman" for that matter, are not solid signifiers.

Case in point (from a review by Fausto-Sterling, author of Sexing the Body):

In 1843 Levi Suydam, a 23-year-old resident of Salisbury, Connecticut, asked the town's board of selectmen to allow him to vote as a Whig in a hotly contested local election. The request raised a flurry of objections from the opposition party, for a reason that must be rare in the annals of American democracy: It was said that Suydam was "more female than male," and thus (since only men had the right to vote) should not be allowed to cast a ballot. The selectmen brought in a physician, one Dr. William Barry, to examine Suydam and settle the matter. Presumably, upon encountering a phallus and testicles, the good doctor declared the prospective voter male. With Suydam safely in their column, the Whigs won the election by a majority of one.

A few days later, however, Barry discovered that Suydam menstruated regularly and had a vaginal opening. Suydam had the narrow shoulders and broad hips characteristic of a female build, but occasionally "he" felt physical attractions to the "opposite" sex (by which "he" meant women). Furthermore, "his feminine propensities, such as fondness for gay colors, for pieces of calico, comparing and placing them together, and an aversion for bodily labor and an inability to perform the same, were remarked by many." (Note that this 19th-century doctor did not distinguish between "sex" and "gender." Thus he considered a fondness for piecing together swatches of calico just as telling as anatomy and physiology.)



These days, we might be persuaded that possession of a penis is more important than a fondness for calico when determining whether or not somebody is a man, but ultimately the categories are not perfect. They do not touch each other perfectly at the boundary points, and they are constructs based on apperception - one may meet a man and then discover somewhere down the line that that man is female, or indeed that the man would like not to be a man, but is stuffed because he also does not want to be a woman. And at this point he really has no other option; certainly ten years are so ago he had no other option. Now, although he is likely to be discriminated against, harrassed and struggle with official documents, he can decide to be neither male nor female, shoudl he so desire. It's the destabilising of a binary.

Consider this. As Todd gets towards suggestingm gender divisions in pronouns are as arbitrary as pronouns based on height would be. Without gender, we could have tall (men and women, what are they?) represented by one pronoun and short (men and women, what are they?) represented by the other. But short and tall compared to what? What if you are of average height? Or noticably shorter than your peer group? Or just don't feel tall, or short? What if you feel that your crotch (since everyone has crotches, which just happen to look different just like some people have brown hair and some people have black hair) is more important to your sense of self than this tall/short dichotomy, which you feel alienated from. What do you do?
 
 
some guy
17:38 / 20.11.02
But the mere existence of a case does not mean that there cannot be a case for the current two broad categories, and a third broad category for those who do not fit into the first or second. Which may indded be "political". Coudl somebody explain how it would be political, in what sense it would be political and what those politics would be, and why it would be a bad thing.

This has been done by other posters upthread. However, rather than pointing this out in a fit, I will simply say that a third category is problematic because of an implied hierarchy of value - the focus of the pronoun is not "worthy" of a distinct pronoun, as with men and women. It legitimizes "other" into the language in a manner than I'm sure many minority interests (e.g. those ostensibly served by the pronoun) would object to. "She" tells us something specific. "Ze" tells us only that we are not dealing with a man or woman ... although we in fact might be after all. So while an epicene pronoun arguably gets us around the grammatically tricky solutions currently in use, it is rife with problems of its own.

Is RuPaul calling herself "she" political? If so, is that a bad thing? if not, why not?

It's obviously political, in that it carries with it an assumption that we should be referred to by our self-expressed identities rather than biology. Is it a bad thing? It really depends on your point of view - many trannies do not want to be women and so strict use of the feminine pronoun mangles our understanding of what's happening on a sociological level. On the other hand, many trannies adopt "she" and don't care about the possible resultant confusion (e.g. a man making a pass at a convincing tranny everyone has called "she" all night). A male identifying as woman is not a female, and there could be an argument for basing pronoun usage on biology. But it's a separate issue to the question of more than two genders, as the players are working within the dualistic system.

I believe that there are third-gendered groups in some First Nations groups

This is why the issue of multiple genders deserves serious debate and exploration. What precisely would a third (or fourth etc) gender be? Does self-indentification trump biology? Should it? At what point do we finally throw our hands in the air and say, "You may identify as a Volkswagen, but you aren't?" If a third-gendered Native American attends a skinny dipping party and is "obviously" a man, is it okay for people to refer to "him?" Who gets the "say" when it comes to language - the users, or the subject?
 
 
01
18:11 / 20.11.02
My friend at work is the rock star of local drag queens. We're talking Lord Fanny fabulousness here. I overhear alot of conversation about people in the local drag loop. It seems commonplace to refer to a female impersonator in female terms, when they're dressed up or "in character" and to use male when not. Anyways this was what was explained to me one day when, being really confused, I inquired . It seems like its a respect thing moreso than a political thing (however it does seem to emulate slight political overtones as well).
I think that alot of the questions brought up in this thread should be almost be handled on a case by case basis by the mind's own "Internal Language Processing Tribunal." Thunk.

As to the question of "Hir" and "ze"? Lightyears beyond ridiculous. "They" works just fine. Doesn't French allow for both the singular and plural use of some pronouns? ie "vous". Now before all you French linguists start sharpening your sickles and pitchforks, I'm not completely sure about the accuracy of this. My French is at the equivilant Dubya level. Sub-rudimentary-basement. If anyone can clarify please do so.

Point being we should adjust our definitions of terms such as "they" rather then use made up words that carry along such undesirable PC baggage in their connotations that they overshadow the intent of what the speaker/writer (sriter?!!?) is trying to say. Do you want your pronoun stinking up your entire sentence with wankiness? How about your paragraph or page or entire point? You could be telling me about the most compelling shit I've ever heard but it would all turn into Charlie Brown's teacher Wah-wah-wah-wah if I heard a "ze" or "hir". Jack, for the love of Christ please stop. From your posts you seem cool but if I just met you face to face and you started spouting this "hir" stuff, my Wanker alarm would be blaring at "Air Strike Immenent" levels.
 
 
01
18:15 / 20.11.02
if I've just been thread rotting it up and re-iterated shit that's been said a million times, my apologies.
 
 
ONLY NICE THINGS
18:33 / 20.11.02
Wow...I had no idea the "political" implications were so bizarre. So, in order to protect people with non-binary gender alignment, we should allow no means for language to identify them, or for them to express their identity...for their own good. Crikey. Is this what everyone thinks is the political objection? And if so, why is the logical response not to have a "universal" epicene pronoun, then just use the culturally specific ones on those occasions when you are exposed to that culture? Or is this only an argument for not using the epicene as an alternative to "they", so it is saved especially for gender-variant people?

If a third-gendered Native American attends a skinny dipping party and is "obviously" a man, is it okay for people to refer to "him?" Who gets the "say" when it comes to language - the users, or the subject?

No....the third-gendered person skinny-dipping at the party would be *obviously male*. Not *obviously a man*. Obviously, the third-gendered person is *not* a man, otherwise they/ze/ey/pickyourpronoun would not be a third-gendered person. They/ze/ey/pickyourpronoun would be a man. Man, you see, is a gender. Assumign you cannot be two genders simultaneously, therefore, They/ze/ey/pickyourpronoun could not be a man. If you believe that one can be two genders simultaneously, it occurs to me that the need for an epicene pronoun is greater than ever. And why the scarequotes on obviously and say?

Likewise:

many trannies do not want to be women and so strict use of the feminine pronoun mangles our understanding of what's happening on a sociological level

This is why "trannie" is not going to be much use as a tool here if used monolithically. Some transvestites just like to dress in the clothes generally associated with the opposite gender without subverting their own gender identity. Others want to subvert or reverse their own gender orientation. Some want to pass as apparently female, others do not care about passing as female but do want to behave as a *woman*, and so on. Because gender is too complex to divide into two neat boxes, and transvestism too complex to put in one. Good, isn't it? I'm not sure where you got the idea that as soon as a male puts on a dress they/ze/em/pickyourpronoun must be referred to religiously as "she", btw - was that in this thread? I think you may be getting transgender and transvestite (and "woman", in fact) mixed up.

There is in fact a whole thread about transvestites "tricking" people into thinking they were in fact female. A lot of people get very confused. I shall look for a link in a second.

As for working within the dual system...well yes. Because the dual system is the only game in town, outside very small enclaves, including our first people.

To adress Who gets the "say" when it comes to language - the users, or the subject? I got some help from one of my gender studies chums. See what you think:

The subject. In communities where gender's obviously being fucked with, it's apparently etiquette to just say "What pronoun do you prefer?" but I have to say I'd hesitate, scotch the issue and ask his mate.

Hir mate.

Because, otherwise, why is the penis a more reliable signifier of maleness than the Red dwarf T-shirt and the hog roast? "It is a terribly consequential seizure to deny people the right to determine their own identity" as Sedgwick may have said in a snappy moment.
 
 
grant
19:24 / 20.11.02
Here's a scary confluence of Barbelith ideas - the thread on the Holy Trinity veers right into discussion of gendered pronouns in less than 10 posts. (Check the translations Paul made of Old Testament passages - and then take those in reference to the history of Christianity's views on gender.)

And this essay here makes some pretty interesting points about gender-neutral pronouns, too. And the gender of God.
 
 
some guy
19:29 / 20.11.02
Wow...I had no idea the "political" implications were so bizarre. So, in order to protect people with non-binary gender alignment, we should allow no means for language to identify them, or for them to express their identity...

Now you're being deliberately obtuse. An epicine pronoun does not allow someone of non-binary gender alignment to express their identity - rather, it merely signifies that they are not a part of the traditional binary system. This isn't the same thing. They are not being signified as "something," but rather "not something."

No....the third-gendered person skinny-dipping at the party would be *obviously male*. Not *obviously a man*. Obviously, the third-gendered person is *not* a man, otherwise they/ze/ey/pickyourpronoun would not be a third-gendered person.

I'm talking specifically from the viewpoint of the other people in the pool here, for whom gender and biological sex are the same thing (ie: the bulk of the world's population). Most people will call a person with a penis "him" whether that person identifies as a man or not. This is why I expand the issue into deliberate extremes - if I identify as a tree, this does not make me a tree, and there is arguably no good reason why a tree pronoun should be created.
 
 
ONLY NICE THINGS
19:32 / 20.11.02
Zerone:

Doesn't French allow for both the singular and plural use of some pronouns? ie "vous".

Vous is the only pronouns so usable, I think, and the singular "vous" is a formal usage - you use it to address your superiors. So, versatile but tied into the class system.

Otherwise...I'm not sure if you mean that an epicene pronoun should not be used to describe a person who might at different times be male or female "If the passenger is too cold, ze can adjust the air heater with the control to their left", or should not be used at all.

If the latter, I'm interested, again, by the idea that we have reached exactly the right level of linguistic diversity *now*, and anything more is "PC madness", and if the former then the question is presumably one of grammar rather than political correctness, because we are just arguing about the best way to express a singular without using "he" or "she". I'm a bit depressed that these two things are still being conflated....

Also can't shake the feeling that the same "this is just silly" opinion might have been trotted out when people started calling poofters "gay men", or niggers "black people", or ladies "women", or, indeed, spinsters "Ms". Probably a lot of wanker alarms went off, and in some places still would.

Which is not to say that the epicene pronoun is a logical evolution of language, only that the same objections have probably been raised to every attempt to make language more inclusive, successful or unsuccessful, wise or misguided. It isn't enough just to say "I think this is silly". That tells us nothing more than your opinion. Opinions, like arseholes, are common across gender lines.

Still, the idea of respect is a good one, and is why I suspect the easiest thing to do, as people had tolearn to with "Mrs or Ms", might be just to ask what people are happiest with where there is ambiguity, then use it. That seems to be pretty low-impact and fairly considerate, and will keep the gender students happy.
 
 
The Falcon
19:43 / 20.11.02
Vous is the only pronouns so usable, I think, and the singular "vous" is a formal usage - you use it to address your superiors. Is it not for people you don't know, as well? When I last did French, 9 years ago, I seem to remember the distinction was familiar/formal, rather than equal or inferior/superior.

I could be wrong...
 
 
some guy
19:52 / 20.11.02
When I last did French, 9 years ago, I seem to remember the distinction was familiar/formal, rather than equal or inferior/superior.

It's both...
 
 
w1rebaby
20:11 / 20.11.02
Does anyone know any Japanese?

I remember hearing that formal Japanese has lots of structures like this, for expressing social relationships. But I know no Japanese, so I can't tell.
 
 
Haus about we all give each other a big lovely huggle?
20:52 / 20.11.02
Now you're being deliberately obtuse. An epicine pronoun does not allow someone of non-binary gender alignment to express their identity - rather, it merely signifies that they are not a part of the traditional binary system. This isn't the same thing. They are not being signified as "something," but rather "not something."

In your opinion. And, without an epicene pronoun, there is not even the opportunity to step outside that binary system. Much as, before "Ms", there was no way to step outside the system in which women were identified as either maiden or married.

Where I can see a problem here is if the epicene is also used as "they" is used now, since our non-binary subject can feel pissed off that he/she/they/ze/ey/pickyourpronoun is being lumped in with the generic - see the footnotes page on the problem of "it". Which is an argument to keep "they".

Of course, the hardcore would point out that, since we seem to do OK without distinct masculine and feminine pronouns in the plural and every other person, the logical thing to do would be to replace "he" and "she" altogether. Which may well be true, especially as our as-yet-unestablished epicene pronoun may sound much better than either (just to forestall yet another chorus of "but it sounds silly" there). Might get a bit confusing, though. Don't suppose anyone's going to look at the height comparison?


No....the third-gendered person skinny-dipping at the party would be *obviously male*. Not *obviously a man*. Obviously, the third-gendered person is *not* a man, otherwise they/ze/ey/pickyourpronoun would not be a third-gendered person.

I'm talking specifically from the viewpoint of the other people in the pool here, for whom gender and biological sex are the same thing (ie: the bulk of the world's population). Most people will call a person with a penis "him" whether that person identifies as a man or not. This is why I expand the issue into deliberate extremes - if I identify as a tree, this does not make me a tree, and there is arguably no good reason why a tree pronoun should be created.

So, you believe that this member of the first nations is only a matter of degree from wanting to identify as a tree? This is interesting, because....well, someone who believes themselves to be a "man" or "woman" based purely on biology could be in the same boat. The biologist Anne Fausto-Sterling identified five separate chromosomal arrangements sufficiently distinct to be identified as different sexual setups in 1993, altohugh in 1999's Sexing the Body she argued that actually using these five categorisations would in itself be divisive. That's problem one with the assumption that sexual characteristics and gender map precisely (Jamie Lee Curtis, anyone?). Problem two is that you appear, with respect, to have tied yourslef in something of a knot here. You say that for most people gender and biological sex are the same thing (what you actually mean, I assume, is that biological sex provides an infallible guide to gender, as presumably a cow, with the biological sex of "female" would not be the same thing as a woman). You do not believe that there should be a pronoun representing genders other than "man" (he) and "woman" (her). Now, what if our skinny-dipper is an hermaphrodite (although I believe they prefer the term "intersexed" - the Intersexed Society of North America has a web page here?

The skinny dipper is thus neither male nor female, or if you prefer both male and female. However, as biological sex and gender are the same thing, his/her/their/hir/eir/pickyourpossessivepronoun gender must be the same as h/h/t/h/e/pypp sex. But no such pronoun exists, because according to the binary model of gender no such gender exists, and since gender and sex are the same thing therefore no such sex can exist. Therefore the hermaphrodite/Intersexed/American cannot exist. Assuming that h/h/t/z/e/pysp (and before anyone points out how clumsy this is - I am having fun with it) survives this cataclysmic realisation, we are still left with the problem of the pronoun. "They"? We will have to use it with a singular verb form, which will sound very odd indeed, unless we wish to communicate that there is more than one of h/h/t/h/e/pyop, which there amn't (really, there cannot be one, as we have discussed). Also, the hermaphrodite/Intersexed American might object to being lumped with a generic pronoun used to express people of indeterminate gender, rather than h/h/t/h/e/pypp own glorious profusion of very determinate gender. You could have asked the hermaphrodite which pronoun they would prefer if the concepts of man and woman were not tied to gender, which is the same as biological sex, we would be OK, because we coudl just ask the hermaphrodite what h/h/t/h/e/pysp wanted ot be used, but as it is that would not be an answerable question.

Basically, your statement is incoherent unless we assume either the separation of biological sex and gender or the non-existence of the Intersexed. Or that an epicene pronoun is a necessity (that epicene pronoun could, of course, be "they", but see the footnotes page or much of this thread for a summary of the problems both of singular and of plural "they"). The easiest link there is probably the statement "gender and biological sex are the same thing", because even the dictionaries would throw that one out of court, and they are usually deeply reactionary.

So, onto our third-sexed Native American. As far as hetcetera is concerned, hetcetera has the right elements, biological or otherwise, to be a member of the third gender. Obviously. Otherwise hetcetera would not belong to it. However, it is possible that some people outside hetcetera's people may not quite get it, or that hetcetera might be without some of the elements that make hetc.'s gender obvious. So, it is possible that some people, confused by the penis (a signifier of maleness that is often seen as a good reason for a human being to be classified as "a man", although as in the case of your or zerone's transvestite or drag queen friends not necessarily always the case), and thus call him "he". At which point he could, if he could be bothered, explain that, although hetc. was biologically male, this was only tangentially relevant to his gender, which was (insert name of third gender here). He could then tell them what the correct form of pronominal address would be. Which, unless one feels it would be better to use the form in hetc's native tongue within English, woudl be again where an epicene pronoun would come in handy (which could, again, be singular "they", but see footnotes page). I don't see the confusion. At best we're talking about mild social awkwardness, and probably nothing hetc. hasn't dealt with before. They're all naked, for heaven's sake. I imagine a bit of grammatical setting-straight wouldn't kill anyone.

Again, I'm not sure why the excision of a pronoun form which could approximate to this person and not result in hetc. being stubbornly and incorrectly referred to by a pronoun appropriate to a completely different gender in hetc.'s culture because of a mistaken understanding of the relationship between the physiological term "sex" and the grammatical term "gender" advances the sum of human understanding...

And, incidentally, "tree" is neither a sexual nor a gender classification, nor indeed a description of what a human being looks like naked (unless you are *very* lucky). Therefore you are performing a category error. There are tangents between gender modification and other forms of body modification by, say, people who identify as cats or lizards, but I believe that people who identify as cats and lizards generally do so with a pretty simple binary gender division. Therefore the whole "tree" thing is a red herring, but you may want to start a new thread on posthumanism, which could embrace gender relaignment, Harawayan cyborgism and other body modifications, or on body modifications, which could include tattoing, scarification and the above. But "tree" is here not an extreme but simply a misunderstanding; it is a physical object, genders are grammatical (and subsequently in the history of the word social and ideological) classifications, and biological sexes are ways of grouping physiological differences within a single species.

I'm honestly not being deliberately obtuse. But, and I hope nobody takes this the wrong way and gets upset, I have never had to discuss this starting this far back before. I hope the attention I am lavishing will be seen as a sign of good faith (a), and a good reason to reply comprehensively (b)

Zerone: Yes, I obviously didn't explain myself clearly. It is formal, and thus used when addressing, say, a stranger, a superior officer, or your father back in the good old days.

("hetcetera". Hah. I kill me)


Oh, for reference, by the way, there's a short article by Fausto-Sterling here, which may help to clear up the distinction betwen gender and sex.

A thread discussing inhumanism (identifying with trees and suchlike) started here, but did not get too far - there may be something here to inspire another thread.

For more on trans issues, why not have a look at this thread? It also includes discussion of epicene pronoun use...

And the thread on deceptive transvestites is here. Possibly Barbelith's finest hour...some serious discussion, some gibbering insanity, accusations of homo/heterophobia all over the shop, and some absolutely killer one-liners.
 
 
some guy
21:28 / 20.11.02
No....the third-gendered person skinny-dipping at the party would be *obviously male*. Not *obviously a man*.

Again, I'm speaking from the viewpoint of most people on Earth, for whom biology is paramount and self-identification largely irrelevant. Of course, that pronouns should conform to self-identification rather than biology in itself a political decision, one I don't think anyone here has tried to build a case around. Why not center pronouns around biology? The layman already assumes that's the case anyway.

Obviously, the third-gendered person is *not* a man, otherwise they/ze/ey/pickyourpronoun would not be a third-gendered person.

Again, specifically describe a third gender, please, and why it wouldn't fall into one of the two conventional categories (which currently even transsexuals and cross-dressers do).

Now, what if our skinny-dipper is an hermaphrodite

This is where it gets tricky, I agree. However, I believe an epicine pronoun does not solve this problem, but merely relegates the hermaphrodite to "other."

Also, the hermaphrodite/Intersexed American might object to being lumped with a generic pronoun used to express people of indeterminate gender, rather than h/h/t/h/e/pypp own glorious profusion of very determinate gender.

You've answered your own question about the political ramifications of an epicene pronoun here.

As far as hetcetera is concerned, hetcetera has the right elements, biological or otherwise, to be a member of the third gender.

This gets us back into the arena of "sez who." What precisely constitutes a gender in your opinion? Could there be 6 billion of them, if we all chose to self-identify differently? Would we then be arguing for 6 billion new pronouns?

And, incidentally, "tree" is neither a sexual nor a gender classification

If gender is self-determined, then who are you to say this?
 
 
Kit-Cat Club
23:00 / 20.11.02
I think 'tree' as a taxonomical category is probably best described as a botanical class. Not only that, but it's in a different kingdom to Homo sapiens. And, as a botanical class, it has very little to do with either biological sex or gender.

As Haus pointed out, those who identify as different species tend *not* to do so on the basis of not fitting into either of the gender categories 'man' and 'woman', so the question is probably irrelevant.

On a minor note - the 'vous' question is also irrelevant, since the equivalent is 'you', which is also gender neutral; and the French equivalents of 'he' and 'she', 'elle' and 'lui', are gendered. German also has gendered pronouns - 'er' and 'sie' - but does have a pronoun for neuter vowels, 'es'. I don't know whether colloquial German speakers would actually refer to 'das Maedchen' as 'es' rather than 'sie', but I think it would be grammatically correct.

Laurence - surely your hermaphrodite person might well feel that ze is neither a man nor a woman, and as such is a member of a third gender? I don't mean that ze automatically will, just that it is possible. And I think the point is that the option should be available for those who wish to use it - I can't see why people of, um, er, non-binary gender shouldn't have the opportunity to use an epicene pronoun if they wish - you're assuming that language is imposed on people rather than being adopted and adapted by people, and I don't think that's always the case.

Of course, some people might wish to use it because it is sometimes better in terms of grammar, and that makes them happy. That's not a political thing though.
 
 
some guy
23:52 / 20.11.02
I think 'tree' as a taxonomical category is probably best described as a botanical class. Not only that, but it's in a different kingdom to Homo sapiens. And, as a botanical class, it has very little to do with either biological sex or gender. As Haus pointed out, those who identify as different species tend *not* to do so on the basis of not fitting into either of the gender categories 'man' and 'woman', so the question is probably irrelevant.

Aside from your admission of "tend," I'd argue that until we present a clear definition of "gender" for this thread, it's silly to claim that someone can't self-identify as a tree on that basis. Yes, it's an extreme example, but we need to decide what our boundaries are - the point at which self-identity is irrelevant next to other facts.

Laurence - surely your hermaphrodite person might well feel that ze is neither a man nor a woman, and as such is a member of a third gender?

Well, depending on our definition of gender a hermaphrodite might be described a dual-gendered or ungendered. But I suppose the key thing here is I disagree that current pronoun usage has anything to do with gender in the context of mainstream society, but rather biology. The use of pronouns has recently become politicized by people who would prefer that pronouns be linked to self-identified gender rather than biology, but I don't know that there's a very convincing argument as to why this should be so.

And I think the point is that the option should be available for those who wish to use it - I can't see why people of, um, er, non-binary gender shouldn't have the opportunity to use an epicene pronoun if they wish - you're assuming that language is imposed on people rather than being adopted and adapted by people, and I don't think that's always the case.

I'm not assuming that it is imposed on people (quite the opposite, which is why I think "they" being used as a current solution to the pronoun issue doesn't represent a problem). Rather, I'm pointing out that an epicene pronoun could be seen as a negative development, as it creates sense of "other." It's a bit like if we had racial descriptors for "white," "black" and "other," but nothing else.
 
 
ONLY NICE THINGS
00:02 / 21.11.02
Also, the hermaphrodite/Intersexed American might object to being lumped with a generic pronoun used to express people of indeterminate gender, rather than h/h/t/h/e/pypp own glorious profusion of very determinate gender.

You've answered your own question about the political ramifications of an epicene pronoun here


I think we're having comprehension issues here. The "people of indeterminate gender" here are not the "other". They are the hypothethical "passenger" or "any person wishing to use this service". The people normally assigned the generic pronoun "they", who do not exist except as potential readers or hearers of the phrase. So, this has no impression as such on the (still bizarre, or as I am increasingly suspecting just rather sheltered) opposition to the idea of people being other than men or women.

To quote:

But I suppose the key thing here is I disagree that current pronoun usage has anything to do with gender in the context of mainstream society, but rather biology.

This, I think, is where the problem becomes pretty much clear.

You appear unwilling discuss Fausto-Sterling or any of the ramifications of this or the other points I have raised (in fact, the more comprehensive, lengthy and entry-level my posts become, the shorter the response - is there an algorithm?), but I would suggest looking instead at the dictionary. Any decent-sized dictionary will do. It will tell you that "gender" is a grammatical classification. Therefore, their may be 6 billion different *attitudes* to gender, but that is a rather different question to how many genders there are. The introduction of a new gender, with accompanying pronouns, is on one level a grammatical change, which must be justified just as the redemption of the split infinitive or the use of "they" to express an indefinite potential reader of variable gender.

You may also wish to consider that *everybody* self-identifies. You self-identify as a man. Presumably you have some of the biological indicators of maleness (a penis, testicles), may possess some of the others (facial hair, thicker body hair), and probably lack some of those not specific to your species (a brightly coloured coat, horns). On the basis of these cues, and what you have learned about what they mean, you identify yourself as a man, as do others. Other male animals do not presumably self-identify as "men". It is a process, probably best described as heuristic or performative.

Although the examples above perfectly well illustrate the failure of the thesis that sex and gender are identical, if the vast majority of the population holds that view, then I can only offer to sell them dictionaries.

As for third-sexes - try the Hijras or the Berdache (to use an ugly but convenient European term). Also, take a look at the Trans thread linked to above once the moderations go through - it shoudl have lots of links and useful information on people with complicated relationships to the grammar of gender currently recognised as standard.
 
 
Lurid Archive
01:07 / 21.11.02

Laurence: What exactly are you objecting to? Are you saying that you would oppose the introduction of any new gender(less) pronoun? You seem to be doing this on the grounds that people can use "they" and that it would cause a sense of otherness. Would you still maintain this position if a coherent minority, say the intersexed, expressed a desire for another pronoun? Not that I am saying such a position exists, merely that I offer you a choice between a hypothetical acceptance and seeming inflexibility.

Haus: Having separated biology and gender, and then demonstrated the existence of numerous, grammatically unrecognised genders, doesn't that leave one with an arbitrary line to draw? That is, unless one throws out both "he" and "she" (which might be best in some sense, if a touch difficult) then gender oriented pronouns will always fall short of an exactitude of description. Not that I am against new pronouns, just that language is a compromise whose inefficiencies cannot by themselves be used to justify change.

I'm thinking that there needs to be popular support for a change in order for it to be practicable and desirable. I think that such a case has possibly been made for the internet where gender is unspecified. A case might also be made for the intersexed, but surely there should be a desire for change first? Is there one? I don't know.
 
 
rakehell
01:41 / 21.11.02


This gets us back into the arena of "sez who." What precisely constitutes a gender in your opinion? Could there be 6 billion of them, if we all chose to self-identify differently? Would we then be arguing for 6 billion new pronouns?

That would make it easier because then the argument for a GNP would be even greater.

My apologies if I am wrong, Laurence, but you may have misunderstood the aims of introducing a GNP. It's not there to represent every gender, but rather, all genders. Most of the problems you pose disappear if he/she is replaced with ze.

You say:

An epicine pronoun does not allow someone of non-binary gender alignment to express their identity - rather, it merely signifies that they are not a part of the traditional binary system.

Most of the proposals for GNP usage eliminate the need for the traditional binary system; at the very least the GPNs replace it in most, if not all, instances. GNP would be used for everybody, not just the "special cases".

For me, one of the big positives of using GPNs is that childeren can grow up and read about hypothetical doctors, lawyers and firefighters who aren't male by "default".
 
 
some guy
01:50 / 21.11.02
I think we're having comprehension issues here. The "people of indeterminate gender" here are not the "other". They are the hypothethical "passenger" or "any person wishing to use this service". The people normally assigned the generic pronoun "they", who do not exist except as potential readers or hearers of the phrase. So, this has no impression as such on the (still bizarre, or as I am increasingly suspecting just rather sheltered) opposition to the idea of people being other than men or women.

Perhaps I am not explaining clearly, especially since you yourself described what I am talking about in your hermaphrodite example. Basically, an epicene pronoun does not fulfill all of the functions of the masculine and feminine pronouns, which carry with them additional information not included in an epicene pronoun. For example, "he" relays gender information that "ze" does not - it carries a "positive" value, describing a thing. An epicene pronoun carries a "negative" value, describing what a thing is not. This is an important distinction that might go some way to explaining why some groups who ostensibly would be served by an epicene pronoun might actually oppose its use. The information it conveys is "other," implying a hierarchy of masculine, feminine and other. Why shouldn't each of these "others" get a "positive" pronoun? And if they should, where does it end?

It will tell you that "gender" is a grammatical classification. Therefore, their may be 6 billion different *attitudes* to gender, but that is a rather different question to how many genders there are.

I'm not sure that gender is solely a grammatical classification, actually. It's a cultural descriptor as well. And find me a true third example aside from man and woman (which males who wish to be women, males who have become women etc. - this latter type of "gender" can already use current pronouns without difficulty). I accept hermaphrodites are an issue, so I'm looking for something else here.

Other male animals do not presumably self-identify as "men". It is a process, probably best described as heuristic or performative.

Again, this gets into the issue of whether self-identity is always paramount (or indeed "correct").

Although the examples above perfectly well illustrate the failure of the thesis that sex and gender are identical, if the vast majority of the population holds that view, then I can only offer to sell them dictionaries.

I'm firmly in the "masses create language" camp, I'm afraid. The rules of grammar arose from how people spoke, and should always be a record of that rather than commandments for it. Connotation trumps denotation every time. We'll just have to agree to differ on this. Oddly, I support the creation of new pronouns for just this reason...

As for third-sexes - try the Hijras or the Berdache

I believe I asked for your definition of gender and how there can be more than two but less than 6 billion, actually. I'll look into these examples and comment later...

Are you saying that you would oppose the introduction of any new gender(less) pronoun?

No - in fact I suspect a better alternative for the current "problem" is to abolish gender-based pronouns altogether and just use a single genderless pronoun for everyone. But I don't think it's going to happen, because for most people, if you're born with a penis you're a man, and you get a "he." If a minority group requested a specific pronoun, as Lurid suggests, I'm cool with that. But my question is where it stops - should we really invent pronouns for everyone? Should there be dozens? I don't see a convincing case for "he/she" not to be linked to biology, although I accept there are certain problems (hermaphrodites etc).
 
 
some guy
01:53 / 21.11.02
My apologies if I am wrong, Laurence, but you may have misunderstood the aims of introducing a GNP. It's not there to represent every gender, but rather, all genders. Most of the problems you pose disappear if he/she is replaced with ze.

No, it seems there are two distinct contexts we are discussing. I'm all for a GNP and the abolition of gendered pronouns. I am against a GNP that would, in effect, function as a signifier of "other".
 
 
ONLY NICE THINGS
07:45 / 21.11.02
OK. Gender is a grammatical and cultural descriptor. Which means, as I said, that it is not a biological one.

This really is a pretty obvious statement, Lawrence. Gender is not a physical descriptor. Sex is. Grammarical and cultural decisions about gender are frequently based on the information provided by, among other things, the physical body. I made a number of points about this, both in terms of the universally self-defining nature of gender and the differences between the number of chromosomal structures available being rather more than two, which you have not addressed. I might add that your insistence that gender and sex are the same thing is rather undermined by your wilingness to call your "trannie" friends "she", although clearly they are not *physically* female.

As I say, look in a dictionary. You may have seen this as an insult, but is in fact a request, to save time. In fact, from dictionary.com:

Grammar.
A grammatical category used in the classification of nouns, pronouns, adjectives, and, in some languages, verbs that may be arbitrary or based on characteristics such as sex or animacy and that determines agreement with or selection of modifiers, referents, or grammatical forms.
One category of such a set.
The classification of a word or grammatical form in such a category.
The distinguishing form or forms used.
Sexual identity, especially in relation to society or culture.

The condition of being female or male; sex.

Females or males considered as a group: expressions used by one gender.

Traditionally, gender has been used primarily to refer to the grammatical categories of “masculine,” “feminine,” and “neuter,” but in recent years the word has become well established in its use to refer to sex-based categories, as in phrases such as gender gap and the politics of gender. This usage is supported by the practice of many anthropologists, who reserve sex for reference to biological categories, while using gender to refer to social or cultural categories. According to this rule, one would say The effectiveness of the medication appears to depend on the sex (not gender) of the patient, but In peasant societies, gender (not sex) roles are likely to be more clearly defined. This distinction is useful in principle, but it is by no means widely observed, and considerable variation in usage occurs at all levels.


That, incidentally, is why "tree" is a false trail. Because identifying as a tree has nothing to do with your gender, just as my identification as "tall" has nothing to do with gender.

Now, since we are in a thread discussing gender as a grammatical construct, we can hopefully say that using gender as a synonym for "sex" is not what we are doing, as otherwise we would not be discussing gender as a grammatical construct. So, we are looking at the first two definitions, basically. Which are not actually indistinguishable (see the Hijras, the Berdache, the fafafines, de Fiore - who is a perfect example of somebody victimised by the failure of the society of her time to acknowledge the existence of the possibility of gender roles other than "man" and "woman", since neither described her *sex*) from pheno- or genotypical sex. This is a statement I and others have made and demonstrated many times in many different ways, here and in, say, the "Genderfuck You" thread, but to continue - in the absence of another gender option in their culture, Fausto-Sterling (and, IIRC, the ISNA) believed that people who are born without a clear distinction of the biological characteristics of either *sex* should be raised as belonging to the most appropriate *gender*. If there were three genders and two biological sexes (as, of course, there *are* in the societies mentioned above), then people would have to be assigned to one of those three genders according to a set of criteria relating to matters other than biological sex, which would be in itself inadequate to decide gender - that is, whether that infant was referred to as "he", "she" or the third alternative. See the article above, where somebody was identified as a woman partly by their love of matching calico; that was a hundred plus years ago, and it was already not enough to say "penis - man" or "vagina - woman". They were looking for other gender identifiers.

As for "othering" - well, yes. That's what gender does. You are assuming that "man" and "woman" are not othering, because you are used to them, but it might be useful to think in grammatical terms again. The masculine gender (which is, lest we forget, used in inflected languages for things that are not biologically male) describes a set of rules, the feminine gender another, the neuter gender another. Il est beau. Elle est belle. Das ist gut. bonus, boan, bonum. Likewise, the cultural gender determinant "man" identifies what a person is, and what a person is not (a woman, most obviously. Whether "woman" does the same or merely describes the condition of not being a man is a question for another day). A term describing a third gender, such as "Ihamana" among the Zuni, serves the same function - it says "this person has this gender, and not either of the others". Because not all men are identical, and neither are all women, and so it strikes me as a bit odd to say that a different gender would have to be invented to describe every variation of biological or physiological construction, especially if your genders (like those of, say, the Zuni) are not dependent even on the obvious phenotypical manifestations of the sexual binary.

Now, it strikes me that this is no more othering, and a lot less alienating, than just telling people they have to be "he" or "she", depending on their "biological sex" (do you mean their chromosomal sex or the set of sexual characteristics they might possess after surgery and hormone treatment, btw?), with the "other" category of, say, "they" (which is, btw, an epicene pronoun, just not a very nice one). I agree with you completely that a better solution would probably be to remove gender from the third person singular pronoun altogether, since gender no longer effectively exists in the others because our language is no longer inflected that way (or not inflected that way very often, more precisely), and get the sense from the sentence. Gender can them be separated from that sticky bit of language and become far more enjoyable. This would remove the problem of the use of such a pronoun as a generic singular as well, of course.

(By contrast, for example, Latin very rarely uses subject pronouns at all, because the verb form and the gender of words describing the subject tell you the gender and number of that subject anyway. "iratus canem necavit" can only mean "the angry man (masculine singular) killed the dog, unless it is referring back to another masculine adjective in a previous sentence)

However, like you I believe that this is not currently within the art of the possible to abolish the gendered pronoun. So, I am looking for something that people who do not fit the current gender polarity, regardless of the sexual characteristics they possess - a look at the "Genderfuck you" and "Trans 101" threads might fill in some detail on this, also - can, if they choose, select as an identifying pronoun, so they (actually a plural here - yay!) do not feel shoehorned into "he"ness or "she"ness *against their will*. It is supposed to function (being realistic) as an option, not a panacea. Again, a quick look at lupus thingy's link will show that discussion of the problem of using one word for the generic and gender-variant pronouns, but if one's intention is to minimise structural alterations to the language then one can either adopt this as a course or look at some permutation of "they" as a generic. Again, this is not such an elegant solution as using an epicene pronoun universally, but it is a more swiftly realisable one.
 
 
some guy
13:51 / 21.11.02
OK. Gender is a grammatical and cultural descriptor. Which means, as I said, that it is not a biological one.

Yes, I know. But most people don't, and most people don't use the term that way. I'm sorry, I know we're going to disagree on this, but for me popular usage wins out, creating new terms and definitions. "Ain't" is a word - it means "is not." And so gender is a grammatical and cultural descriptor and to most people linked to biology. Hence my pointing out the tendency for most people to call those with a penis "him." People base their pronoun usage on the sexual binary. Are they wrong to do so? Would this actually solve this whole issue anyway, since everyone is born one of two sexes (barring hermaphrodites, which are still an issue)? I don't think your dictionary definition makes the case that grammatical gender ought to necessarily be linked to self-identified cultural gender.

I made a number of points about this, both in terms of the universally self-defining nature of gender and the differences between the number of chromosomal structures available being rather more than two, which you have not addressed.

And you still haven't given your personal definition of gender, how we identify it and how many you think there can be. I think in most cases biological sex is pretty clear, and has functioned as the keystone for gendered pronouns in speech for a very long time indeed. However, I agree it is a messy area, especially the closer we get to nailing down a dividing line. Like life, it is impossible to define, but we know it when we see it.

I might add that your insistence that gender and sex are the same thing is rather undermined by your wilingness to call your "trannie" friends "she", although clearly they are not *physically* female.

I do not insist that gender and sex are the same, which is why I have no problem calling my tranny friends "she" (and I know there's some confusion on this score, but my cross-dressing friends shorten transvestite to tranny even though we're usually thinking of transexuals with that term). However, because most people use gendered pronouns based on biology rather than self-identified gender, I think we're coming up against conflicting "real-world" definitions here, where grammatical gender and cultural gender use the same word, but do not necessarily reference the same thing. I'm also interested to know whether self-identification "wins out" every time, and where we draw the line. You seem pretty insistent that there are more than two genders, but less than 6 billion. And can someone be wrong about their gender?

That, incidentally, is why "tree" is a false trail. Because identifying as a tree has nothing to do with your gender, just as my identification as "tall" has nothing to do with gender.

It does if one sexually identifies as a tree. Which is absurd, but demonstrates a point. Where do we draw the line? Or are we talking specifically about gender roles, which seems to be a new addition to the discussion below?

see the Hijras, the Berdache, the fafafines, de Fiore - who is a perfect example of somebody victimised by the failure of the society of her time to acknowledge the existence of the possibility of gender roles other than "man" and "woman", since neither described her *sex*) from pheno- or genotypical sex.

I would argue that the Hijras etc. are a case of gender roles, which is not the same thing as gender. I don't have any problem whatsoever with fluid gender roles. But it's silly to argue that if one follows these rules, we use "he" and if one follows those rules, we use "she" and if one follows another set of rules, we use "ze." Of course there's malleability, as in the case of RuPaul, but I would argue that malleability exists because most people use biology to select their gendered pronouns, and assuming the physicial characteristics of the opposite sex allows people to easily slide into using a different pronoun.

You are assuming that "man" and "woman" are not othering, because you are used to them

Yes, but they are "othering" in the same way that "white" is othering - which is that in practice there is not an "othering" effect because it is a descriptor of the dominant group(s). So if we lump all genders aside from the masculine and the feminine into a single epicene pronoun, the othering effect is pronounced, because while the first two genders each receive their own special pronouns, the rest do not. Are they not important enough? Actually, this is why I could support the abolition of gendered pronouns altogether.

Anyway, I think we've reached that happy place where we agree to disagree and move on to something else. We've reached barriers (popular vs. formal use of language etc) that I don't believe we will surmount.
 
 
ONLY NICE THINGS
14:31 / 21.11.02
I'd suggest that "man" identifies the dominant group, really - "woman" is even linguistically subordinate. Which is why gender would be far better off if it were separated from sex.

However, if your contention is simply that most people are ignorant of how to think about gender, and that leads to mistakes such as "gender is the same as biological sex", then I'm right with you. Which is why education rather than surrender is, IMHO, the way forward.

As for gender and gender roles - could you explain how you distinguish them, if you believe that gender is a cultural and not a physiological distinctor? Don't see it. Are you suggesting that these groups of people are somehow playing at gender, in a way that "men" and "women" aren't? I think the problem is that what seems to you "silly" is a result of your upbringing in a binary-gendered society. If you had grown up in a trigendered society (up to five genders, I think, in some tribes), that is, societies with three grammatical gender forms describing human beings, you would not. Now, if we can make *all* genders "roles", by cutting the link between sex and gender, then so much the better. I can then get on with demanding preferential treatment because I am tall. But the fact remains, and has been once again skimmed ovr, that having a penis doesn't make a tomcat a man. It doesn't make a human baby a man, for that matter. Your biological sex division is not "the way it has been done for along time". It's the way the dominant culture does it, and has done for a long time. Outside the dominant culture, other cultures did it in different ways until the dominant culture stopped them. And because it's the dominant culture, it is very difficult to get your head round the idea of difference being possible. Hence "dominant".

As for my "definition" of gender, have a look at the "genderfuck you" thread. There's a lot of interesting stuff in there, and it would provide a decent jumping-off point if the lion's share of the past four pages have not provided enough data.

Do we agree, though, that "he" and "she" should be, in a perfect world, struck from the language, and replaced by an aesthetically pleasing epicene? It strikes me that this is the easiest way to simplify grammar and clear up all these ambiguities...
 
 
some guy
15:17 / 21.11.02
As for gender and gender roles - could you explain how you distinguish them, if you believe that gender is a cultural and not a physiological distinctor?

To be honest, I have never enountered a definition of gender that can't instantly be shot through with a million holes. I'm not even sure it's a worthwhile exercise, which I why I support abolishing gendered pronouns and adopting a single GNP. However, I believe most people in general link gender to physiology - either birth state or adopted state. Hence the guy on the street, being presented with a katoey, is going to say, "That's a guy, he gets a masculine pronoun." So I think a very important question to consider is what precisely we're basing pronoun usage on, and why. I simply do not believe that people base it on gender, and that the phrase "gendered pronoun" is misleading. I believe the "rules" of language must necessarily follow popular usage, and not the other way around.

It's also worth examining the question of self-identity and how many subsets we can create before gendered pronouns become useless through sheer number. As I've said above, there are political problems with an epicene pronoun.

Gender roles have no bearing on actual gender, as we all adopt and discard traditional gender roles throughout the day. I would argue that we do not shift gender ... although I don't know that I would argue it very strongly.
 
 
some guy
15:19 / 21.11.02
Your biological sex division is not "the way it has been done for along time". It's the way the dominant culture does it, and has done for a long time.

We're not talking about other cultures, Haus, as you pointed out upthread. We're talking about ours.
 
  

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