The following
informal guidelines on how to treat people who are transitioning or genderqueer
may be helpful for colleagues and fellow students. Listen to the
person, and ask them how they want to be treated and referred to. Think of the
person as being the gender that they want you to think of them as. Use the name and
pronoun that the person asks you to. If you are not sure what the right pronoun
is, then simply ask
-
University of Oxford Transgender Guidance
An idea
gaining traction is to have an assortment of pronouns that people can choose
from depending on their ‘gender identity’. With 50+ ‘gender identities’ being
bandied about, that could become complicated.
This could be
just the beginning!
I nominate the
Beatles’ “Magical mystery tour” as the theme song for this workshop
Let’s get
back down to Earth for a moment. The suggestion that we refer to individuals
using their ‘preferred pronouns’ is wholly impracticable. What are we supposed
to do when first meeting someone – ask what gender that person ‘identifies
with’ and which of a selection of pronouns that person wants us to use? Am I
supposed to introduce myself as “Barend Vlaardingerbroek, I identify with the
male gender and want you to refer to me as ‘he’”? Will printers of business
cards start inserting spaces for ‘gender identity’ and ‘preferred pronoun’? Blimey,
isn’t this getting just a wee bit bizarre?
Whose
business is your ‘gender identity’ anyway? Answer: yours. And of course you can make that known to your friends and
acquaintances should you so wish. But why should I, whose relationship with you
is purely functional (at work, for instance), be interested? More to the point,
why should you insist on making your
gender identity my business? I object
to having your personal business foisted on me!
Let me make
one thing clear right now: I am emphatically NOT going to even think about any mishmash of pronouns
invented for a plethora of so-called ‘gender identities’. It represents an
imposition that I just won’t wear.
One guy who
has already found himself in hot water over pronoun use is Canadian Professor
Jordan Peterson who got himself into the news last year by publicly refusing to
refer to LGBTQI students by their
‘preferred pronouns’ (for story and poignant commentary, see http://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/the-professor-vs-the-pronoun-warriors/article32474079/). He was dobbed in for ‘offending’ those
students by not bowing to their demand to apply new ‘genderless’ pronouns to
them, insisting on the continuing use of ‘he’ or ‘she’.
But even
with only the two classical ‘gendered’ pronouns, we run into problems with people
who are clearly male but look or are trying to look female, and vice-versa. A
commonsense approach would be to use the pronoun that is consistent with the
appearance.
My sensory inputs are
telling me ‘female’ so I’ll call him ‘she’… what the heck…
But not him!
So now I’m
in trouble with the ‘human rights’ Inquisition for ‘offending’ him for not
referring to him as ‘she’. Oh well, it was a good idea while it lasted…
Life is too
short for this kind of tedious hassle – some of us, at least, have more
important things to get on with – so allow me to make a suggestion: if
‘gendered’ pronouns are causing strife, let’s replace them with non-‘gendered’
pronouns. (At this stage, I must, with all due respect, part company with
Professor Peterson.)
English is
a funny old language as we already have both ‘gendered’ (‘he/she’) and
‘genderless’ pronouns – ‘I’, ‘you’ and ‘they’ (to which could be added ‘one’,
as in “One must watch one’s pronouns!”). Now if we’re going to be pedantic, it
should be noted that ‘he’ can actually double as a ‘genderless’ pronoun; until
not so long ago, there was a general understanding that statements such as “A
member must renew his membership every year, failing which he will be removed
from the register” applied to both males and females. (Those were the days when
the word ‘Man’, especially if spelt with a capital ‘M’, was universally used to
denote all humanity.) But the feminist
lobby got all upset about what had been standard English usage for centuries,
and people at large started modifying their language use.
One
strategy is to use ‘he or she’ but that becomes cumbersome (“A member must
renew his or her membership every year, failing which he or she
will be removed from the register”.) It also raises the contentious problem of
which should come first. Tradition would have us use the male pronoun first,
but… (sigh).
The problem
can often be circumvented by turning the pertinent noun into a plural so that
the genderless ‘they’ can be substituted – “Members must renew their
membership every year, failing which they will be removed from the
register”. This requires making a conscious effort to pluralise the relevant
noun before opening one’s mouth – easy enough for us articulate types, not so
for many others.
An easier
way out is to use ‘they’ regardless of whether the noun is singular or plural –
“A member must renew their membership every year, failing which they
will be removed from the register”. This is now common practice in Western
anglophone jurisdictions and is exemplified by the Oxford Uni usage at the
start of this article. The trouble for a linguistic purist like yours truly is
that this is bad grammar: if the noun is singular, one should not link it to a
plural pronoun! Shock horror!
In these
times when a growing number of people appear to revel in gender ambiguity,
perhaps ‘genderless pronouns’ are a good idea. Exit ‘he’ and ‘she’, enter ‘ze’ (as
one suggestion) whether the subject is male, female, both or neither. “A
member must renew zir membership every year, failing which ze
will be removed from the register.” Problem solved.
Some people
might accuse me of capitulating, but I am in fact being my usual practical
self. I am also respecting others’ privacy. I switched to ‘Ms’ early on because
I regarded it as simpler than having to make a call between ‘Miss’ and ‘Mrs’ that
I might get wrong, less devious than stealing furtive glances at a woman’s
ring-finger, and less intrusive than having to ask her whether she wants me to
use ‘Miss’ or ‘Mrs’ (which amounts to asking her whether she’s married or not,
which really isn’t my business).
There is a
caveat attached to my acceptance of genderless pronouns, though: if we are to
bring in ‘ze’, that becomes a universal third-person pronoun – no nonsense
about individuals choosing a ‘preferred pronoun’. I am ‘ze’ when being referred to, and so are
you, whoever and whatever you are. Do we have a deal?
Good, I’m so
glad we got that sorted out. And now for goodness’ sake let us all get on with
life and minding our own private business. (Dream
on, BV…)
Barend
Vlaardingerbroek BA, BSc, BEdSt, PGDipLaws, MAppSc, PhD is associate professor
of education at the American University of Beirut and is a regular commentator
on social and political issues. Feedback welcome at bv00@aub.edu.lb
4 comments:
I have decided that I will not visit Canada again. I am too old to be trying to work out whatever gender people have decided they identify with and would not feel comfortable asking people what gender they consider themselves to be. I have been speaking English for 79 years and the pronouns I use are I, you, he, she, it, we, they.
What a load of blather about what is, after all, A VERY SERIOUS TOPIC.
Here, for what it is worth, is my solution.
To cover the apparently increasing varieties of sexuality why not simply introduce a Ministry for Enforcement of Discrimination Between Sexes - M.E.D.B.S. They would be empowered to introduce a "Sexuality Scale". For instance the M<F scale with grades running from 0<99. Hence M1F is very nearly a complete male and M99F is very nearly a complete female and M50F defining a "perfect" transsexual.
But, alas, the feministas will not accept that - after all why should M come before F? It doesn't in the alphabet so why here? They will demand an F<M scale thereby confusing the G.B.A.R.W. (Govt Body for Allocation of Radio Waves). But not for long! Sooner rather than later they'd realise that a near 100% woman only gets a value of 1, whereas a near perfect male scores 99 - which simply would not do.
Once that's sorted out and implemented (another millennia perhaps) there will probably be an even bigger variety and the scale will have to be increased. Perhaps an alpha system M (or F) A<Z F (or M). Alternatively the numeric range could be extended using either a decimal point (0.001<9.999) or upping the anti (or uncle, as the case may be) to 0<99; 999 or even 9999 - by then who knows?
What a tangled web we weave simply to appease a few misfits. Simple answer is ; If you stand up to pee, you qualify as man, If you have to sit down to pee, you qualify as woman..
Underlying all this semantic garbage is the altered reality that every abnormal weirdo has to be provided with a separate recognition and individual position.
Except when you don't have any idea what weirdo it is then it becomes some previous plural "they."
Well, I am a dual personality and I want to be distiguished from the casual throwaway "they". I'm special, you see, I live in a world of unreality and I need my own identity tag.
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