The Routledge Handbook of Social and Political Philosophy of Language 2021
DOI: 10.4324/9781003164869-27
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How Much Gender Is Too Much Gender?

Abstract: Languages form a spectrum from having fewer to more gender-specific terms. On one end of the spectrum we have languages like Hebrew. As Ilana Masad explained in an article on The Toast, in Hebrew "one cannot speak in the first-or second-person without indicating gender. The word 'I' is ungendered, but any verb connected to it in present or future tenses is gendered. Thus the phrase, "I want a cookie" becomes, in literal translation, "I female-want a female-cookie"." 1 On the other end of the spectrum, we have … Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 17 publications
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“…Drawing on 15 years of fieldwork, Nordmarken (2019) reports instances of speakers avoiding making gender attributions by using they/them pronouns for everyone. Nordmarken (2019, 54) finds, however, that this practice is “not pervasive.” These findings mirror the empirical and theoretical literature on gender-inclusive language, in which there has been little consideration given to the idea of eliminating gender-specific pronouns and using universal gender-neutral pronouns for everyone (but see Dembroff and Wodak 2021; Wayne 2005). 1…”
Section: Gender-inclusive Language Reformssupporting
confidence: 70%
“…Drawing on 15 years of fieldwork, Nordmarken (2019) reports instances of speakers avoiding making gender attributions by using they/them pronouns for everyone. Nordmarken (2019, 54) finds, however, that this practice is “not pervasive.” These findings mirror the empirical and theoretical literature on gender-inclusive language, in which there has been little consideration given to the idea of eliminating gender-specific pronouns and using universal gender-neutral pronouns for everyone (but see Dembroff and Wodak 2021; Wayne 2005). 1…”
Section: Gender-inclusive Language Reformssupporting
confidence: 70%
“…To name a few proposed drawbacks, binary gender pronouns reinforce the idea that gender is binary, exclude gender nonbinary individuals, and may promote a gender hierarchy that disadvantages women by making gender “omnirelevant” (Bigler & Leaper, 2015). In these debates, some have pointed out that other languages function without binary gender pronouns and have advocated for eliminating gender pronouns entirely in English (Dembroff & Wodak, 2018, 2021). The present work informs these debates by investigating lay beliefs about pronouns in English and Turkish.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Which pronouns should languages have? In English, some arguments call for eliminating gender pronouns and using identity-neutral pronouns for everyone (e.g., Dembroff & Wodak, 2018, 2021; A. C. Saguy & Williams, 2019).…”
Section: Language and Social Identitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This view is further developed by Dembroff and Wodak (2021), arguing that it is not only gendered pronouns that we should refrain from using, but gendered honorifics, generics, and suffixes as well. They argue that English should not be any more gendered than it currently is raced, and since English currently does not have race-specific pronouns, honorifics, generics, or suffixes, we should not have gender-specific ones either.…”
Section: The Story So Farmentioning
confidence: 99%