essaysbysean.blogspot.com
“The most important thing for a
human being to know, from infancy onward, is whether he is welcome or
unwelcome, whether he is being loved and cherished and protected or hated and
feared; and the give-and-take of speech, with all its modulation of color and
tone, provides these essential clues.”
Lewis Mumford, The Miracle of Language
Headnote:
I could pepper this essay with many “words” in
quotation marks, but—how tedious for us both. And then if I read aloud my arms
would get very tired from making scare quotes. So no quote marks today. Let’s
give each other the benefit of the doubt; let’s imagine for any given word the
quotes are there, as needed.
Words, Guys and Unisex
In
the beginning was the word. I will never forget reading about a very young
girl trying to figure out a little box she was holding. It had a drawer she could
open, if only she knew how. She thought by first sliding her jaw open and shut,
and then she opened the drawer. I read this in The Developing Child by Helen Bee. I knew at the time that we
adults, privileged to think more abstractly than children, thought by sliding
words around. Words enabled thought and
words were thought. This was around 1980, when we were saying women
deserved equal rights, yet women were subtly seen as unequal and undeserving. I
kept blinking in surprise as I read the textbook, because Ms. Bee subtly used
she as a generic term for child, instead of he. I looked and saw our words could be better. I figured my blinking
was my problem, not Ms. Bee’s: She had the right to use words this way.
Besides, best not to complain:
Being the only male in my child psychology class, and being fresh from the army
base across the airstrip, I figured I had a lot to learn. One of my classmates
told me about her little boy looking at the textbook cover, which showed
children on a fancy playground, complete with slide. Her child looked up at her
and said: “What if there was a button on the corner of the cover that you could
press, and then—all the children would start moving, and going down the slide.”
Such imagination! Yes, and as students and parents, what new world for our dear
children were we imagining?
We knew darn well we had the right
to imagine: Having survived the 1960’s, and the kitchen “consciousness raising
groups” of the 1970’s, we knew society was not glued in place, but ever
changing itself, like partly dismantling plastic red (Or lego) blocks and then
happily rearranging.
Words are blocks. Some words are more
concrete: mother, father. Other blocks are more abstract: person, parent. We
wanted gateway words; we wanted our little girls to pass through to be letter
carriers, firefighters and police constables without feeling like de-sexed
monsters who had turned into mailmen, firemen and policemen. And as we were
naming our hopes for our children, the debates around imagining equality were
heated and crazy, just like how today our US cousins are imagining that
allowing homosexuals to join the army will mean brawny men wearing dresses on
parade, and soldiers digging their trenches with limp wrists. Crazy.
For both individuals and groups, if
a goal is true and good and beautiful, and if it is not already accomplished,
then there are obstacles. Sometimes the people who oppose noble goals, besides having
crazy imaginations, will obstruct by appealing to laziness or saying, “don’t go
so fast!” Martin Luther King answered these people when he said, “Human
progress never rolls in on wheels of inevitability; it comes through the
tireless efforts of men willing to be co-workers with God, and without this
hard work, time itself becomes an ally of the forces of social stagnation. Now
is the time to make real the promise of democracy…” (Letter from Birmingham
jail)
As it happens, the cart of progress
can slow, stop or even reverse. A handy thought-word is pendulum; my despair is
mollified when I remember such inevitable word-blocks as reactionary,
counterrevolution, and the comforting phrase “one step back for two steps
forward.”
It was exactly one year after my
child psychology class that my college teacher Chuck Killingsworth, a Vietnam
veteran, standing before my recreation class, was fishing for the word sexism,
and none of us could supply it for him. (OK, I could, but I was keeping a low profile just then) He couldn’t
remember it himself, either. How queer. There I was, a shorthaired veteran
among longhaired students who couldn’t come up with the word sexism. They did
not require that word-tool for their lives; they were not working through the
issues. How sad: There had been a time when our side of the generation gap was
going to be liberated from the old, un-new, un-improved generation. Not now. I
looked at the students, and I knew: Their long hair was not political but
cosmetic, less for building a brave new world than for a fashion statement. Short
hair started coming back, with gay men being first. As the pendulum swung.
Before 1990 I remember a university
classmate, Pauline, making a face as I was talking to her. She said, “Don’t use
that word.” Lesbian. She preferred a nice new word, free of stigma: gay. She had been in
the gay students society. Because the initials embarrassed the graduate
students society, the name had just been changed. Now she was in GLASS, for gay
and lesbian academics, students and staff. But make no mistake: gay was still a
gender-neutral term. Gays had fought against the police, and won their legal freedom
of assembly in 1969. After that, after being allowed to meet each other in broad daylight,
they could see for themselves society was mistaken, that they could in fact
have strong wrists and strong self-esteem.
Later came an organization where straight
parents could meet and work through their issues and hear for themselves, from
each other, that no, they didn’t cause it, they couldn’t cure it, and their gay
children could be strong, noble, good church-going citizens. But that was
later, after the 1969 struggle.
The year 2,000 A.D. was to be the
year the future arrived. I remember, in that year, Professor Susan Cran teaching
our business-and-rehabilitation class where I was probably the only male. One
day she was fishing for a reply from any student, anyone, and when we couldn’t
reply said to us in exasperation, “Guys! ... Come on, guys…” And later that
day, in the student union building, I was exiting the Women’s Collective and
Resource Centre as one woman asked two other women, “Are you guys going to the
concert tonight?” Her word choice was quite unremarkable to us: As gays was
unisex, so was guys.
Meanwhile, well before the new
millennium, David Gerrold was writing his masterpiece about an ecological
infestation, The Chtorr War series.
The young viewpoint hero took things like space habitats and a moon base for
granted. What fascinated me was when he would mention two soldiers in the
background and, just two paragraphs later, mention one of them again, this time
saying she. He hadn’t thought to mention the two soldiers were women because
his generation took it for granted that soldiering had been decoupled from
gender. How… how science fiction-y.
As we time travel into the future,
at a breathless velocity of one second per second, new words are appearing and
old ones are being lost. A few months ago I was waiting at a store counter
beside two high school girls. Presumably these girls knew the words Miss, Mrs.
and Mr. I heard them asking each other how to pronounce Ms. and asking what the
word meant. I did not enlighten them. Next day I told this to a university
graduate friend. She said she didn’t know either, adding, “I think it means a
woman is divorced.” Well.
I can remember when we joked that
co-eds—meaning co-educational, meaning female
students—were on campus to proudly “get their Mrs. Degree”—meaning: get a
husband. At the same time, other women, equally happy to get married, thought
it was not society’s business to know whether they were married or not. Hence
Ms. And from their efforts in the 1970’s, today at hiring interviews employers
are no longer legally allowed to ask whether you are married or a tiny bit pregnant.
(Not until after you are hired) Back in
1980, while co-ed was being printed in Reader’s Digest, and few in Canada were saying co-ed, back then no one—including me—ever asked, “Why aren’t men proud to have
initials before their name to say whether they are married?” I guess with our plastic
word-blocks we had built a world we took for granted.
It’s like how during my boyhood we
saw nothing wrong with stage plays like Guys
and Dolls (1950) or with saying “guys and gals.” Few dreamed that we would move
closer to an equal future, closer to words like Ms. and to having guys as a unisex term. As a boy, between drawing
spaceships with little retro rockets by the nose cone, I would do the
arithmetic to figure out how old I would be in the year two thousand. Old! It
was around that time we had to retro built a word: acoustic guitar. At first
there was no such term: The wooden ones were re-named after the electric ones
came out. Words can also be retro vanished: Our US Negro cousins are now our
Black cousins, while Negro, with a capital N, has retro vanished as a proper noun.
(Presumably from being too close to the slang term nigger) And so I can write
with a straight face, “In 1950 Buddy Holly carried his acoustic guitar past a
Black priest.” (Just don’t use such anachronistic dialogue for time traveling
secret agents, not if they are trying to pass for locals) As the pendulum
swings.
Of course I respect biology: I have
enjoyed referring to a respected woman over age thirty as a girl, when she was
my potential girl friend; my child psychology peers in 1980 had enjoyed
referring to boys they knew and gorgeous guys in a student club. Of course it’s
nice to titillate ourselves. But still, sometimes, female adults are women and
groups of adults are guys.
The last time I flew across the
Rockies I declined taking a jet liner in favor of a smaller turbo-prop: It flew
lower with better scenery. I sat at the very front, for the best view, and next
to me on a little fold down seat was a nice good-looking flight attendant. I quite
enjoyed our conversation. I did not call the man a flight steward, nor did I
call his colleague a flight stewardess. Instead I went in for the unisex term. If
I’d had a not-yet-published edition of O Magazine, then I could have asked the
flight attendant what he thought of a letter somebody mailed in. I’m not saying
the writer wanted to return to the days of Guys
and Dolls, but she had managed to retro vanish the unisex term guys.
Writing to Oprah Winfrey’s magazine, she said firmly she didn’t appreciate a
waiter addressing her table with, “What are you guys having?” because, she explained,
she’s not a guy.
I do not believe she wanted female
soldiers to have color coded uniforms and dig trenches with limp wrists, but I
neither do I believe she was thinking through exactly what brave new world, and
what brave army, she wanted her nieces to serve in. If my own niece, Darelynne, wearing
her tattoo of a Guardian Angel with an M-16, is going to fight for my freedom, then
I won’t put obstacles in Darelynne's way. No separate-but-equal uniforms. Meanwhile, as
America is engaged in the war on terror, let’s try to set, for the terror-exporting
states, a good example of human equality.
My US readers, from their time in
Iraq, may recall how the rest of the world felt disturbed to read about nation
building there. In exasperation they asked Americans: “Why not do state
building?” To English-speaking folks offshore, a nation is a group within a
state, such as the nations of Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds within Iraq. As a North American, I
can understand why the Americans still misuse English this way. They don’t get
it because from stirring their traditional melting pot, with hot pressure to
blend in, they have prevented separate nations from congealing. In contrast, up
in Canada, even as they want to separate from the rest of Canada, a group
within the province of Quebec are calling themselves nationalists. In an essay,
Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau said we have to guess which meaning is intended, state
or sub-state, when we hear nation. He
said we go by context.
Just as I expect people to use
context, for continent or republic, when I say “Here in America…” Hint to US cousins: When driving across
the international border to Canada, a crude Charles Bronson (Death Wish, the movie) would say “I’m
American” while the polite secret agent Matt Helm (Death of a Citizen, the novel) would say, “US citizen,” reminding
his partner, “It’s their continent too.”
For my part, for the past decade
and three years, while engaged in conceiving essays about liberty, the context for writing has been during war time, and therefore I have
always been ready to digress into facing the war that is now before us. It is
fitting to act on words like war and citizen. And nation. My alternative? To mentally
secede, saying, “This war belongs to our government, to Our Dear Leader, not to
the rest of us.” Of course, if I say that, then government by the people has
already perished from the earth.
In a New York City accent: “I’m
just saying.”
My niece, now home on Christmas
leave, is a fully-fledged soldier—Not like in my dad’s war: not merely part of
the woman’s auxiliary army corps. You may call me a dreamer, but I think Darelynne will be the first soldier in our family to make Sargent-Major. And I’m
not the only one. My sister, Captain Crawford, has dreams too.
Meanwhile I’m praying and hoping
and wishing that in the context of
gorgeous guys, guys is male, and in the
context of most guys believe in peace, guys is unisex.
Sean Crawford
Civilian on the outside,
Citizen between the ears,
North of the 49th
parallel
January 2014
Lewis Mumford: “…So essential is language to man’s humanness, so
deep a source is it of his own creativity, that it is by no means an accident
in our time that those who have tried to degrade man and enslave him have first
debased and misused language, arbitrarily turning meanings inside out.
Civilization itself, from the most primitive stage onward, moves toward the
continuous creation of a common social heritage, transcending all the
peculiarities of race and environment and historic accident, shared over ever
wider reaches of space and time…”
Excerpt from The Miracle of
Language in The Conduct of Life,
copyright1951, 1979, by Lewis Mumford, Harcourt Brace Janovich, Inc.
Footnotes:
~As the pendulum swings, I suppose
Ms. has faded partly because there is less stigma to being unmarried: Nurses find
it practical to say partner instead of spouse, and nobody says living-in-sin.
And nobody makes a noun by accenting the third syllable in divorce, either.
~A new term is we, as in “Guess
what? Michael and I—we’re pregnant!”
~Bias in word or thought blinds us for seeing the
future… Killingsworth told us how, back from Nam, he did a thesis paper at
university about Vietnam, saying we could win. His academic advisor had to tell
him that, according to Killingsworth's own research, the war was unwinnable. It
was otherwise a well-done paper, right up until the conclusion.
~Much of what makes the Chtorr Wars future feel like science fiction is the incredible lack of hubris among most
people in the chain of command. This healthy lack is partly because the Chtorran plagues removed so
many people, (only 76 congressmen survived) and partly because the US had lost
a conflict back when the hero was a boy, and then had to sign the Moscow treaty—signing
it in Moscow, not at a halfway point. … Sic
transit hubris. …Sometimes you can’t see hubris from the inside: If you are
a US citizen reading this, and you can gain the confidence of a Canadian, try
to get him to tell you what “Yankee B.S.” is.
~Speaking of ego and equal rights:
In the Chtorr War series the viewpoint
hero, a competent army officer, gets a girlfriend who is taller, older, more common-sense-functional, of higher rank, on track to making general, and more sexually
experienced/assertive… Outside of science fiction, can you imagine that in any thrilling
novel today?
I think the reason the hero is OK
with his life partner being higher is not merely because this is in the future,
but because he does not see life as a hierarchy; I think, rather, he
semi-consciously has a binary view, collapsing hierarchy to a question of
territory: some people, in the hero’s territory, are committed to
goals, not excuses, and hence have become competent. Others, outside his territory, have failed to accept the challenge of becoming committed
to getting results. Such a pity.
~For my next essay, I’ll go back to
putting individual words in quotation marks. (You’re welcome)
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