14.990, Qs: Sexism in Language, Early Modern English

LINGUIST List linguist at linguistlist.org
Thu Apr 3 15:44:23 UTC 2003


LINGUIST List:  Vol-14-990. Thu Apr 3 2003. ISSN: 1068-4875.

Subject: 14.990, Qs: Sexism in Language, Early Modern English

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1)
Date:  Wed, 2 Apr 2003 11:41:15 +0200
From:  "jkapovic at pop.tel.hr" <jozo.kapovic at zg.tel.hr>
Subject:  Qs: Language, Women & Sexism

2)
Date:  Thu, 03 Apr 2003 03:17:19 +1100
From:  "mayte valenciano suarez" <valencianom at mixmail.com>
Subject:

-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------

Date:  Wed, 2 Apr 2003 11:41:15 +0200
From:  "jkapovic at pop.tel.hr" <jozo.kapovic at zg.tel.hr>
Subject:  Qs: Language, Women & Sexism




Dear linguists,

you have probably all heard about cases of sexism in language, like
classifying women with fire, snake and other dangerous stuff in one
language or depreciation of meaning in other language by changing the
grammatical gender to feminine (I am writing according to my memory,
feel free to correct me). Also, there are cases like Spanish: los
padres "parents"; in Slavic languages masculine gender rection for 999
women and 1 man (for example); in English he - for a "neutral" pronoun
or Mrs and Miss; default masculine gender for someone of unknown
identity (like in Slavic lgs, Croatian: Tko je doshao? "Who came?"
where doshao is masculine participle), but contrary (default feminine
gender) in Masai, many Afrasian lgs etc.  I am also interested in
men/women language like in Sumerian (eme-KU & eme-SAL), Chukchi or
Yana, cases like Japanese (watashi/atashi/ore/boku etc.) and in
sociolinguistic theories of who is more conservative in language (men
or women, the famous notion that women speak more standard), who is
the leader in spreading the language innovations etc.  I am familiar
with a lot of these cases but I would ask of you to write me other
alike examples or share with me (and others) if you know more about
some of the mentioned cases.

All the contributions will be deeply appreciated and I will of course
send a summary to the List.

thanks in advance,
Mate Kapovic
jozo.kapovic at zg.tel.hr



-------------------------------- Message 2 -------------------------------

Date:  Thu, 03 Apr 2003 03:17:19 +1100
From:  "mayte valenciano suarez" <valencianom at mixmail.com>
Subject:


Hi!
We are a Spanish research group. We are currently dealing with
the Early Modern English period. We wonder whether any of you
can help us finding any material (preferrably corpus data base)
about Early Modern English correspondence. We would be
greetly thankfull.
Mayte Valenciano Suarez




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