On Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 3:27 PM, Matija Šuklje
Personally I feel that the political correctness has gone a bit too far, but where the line should be drawn, I don't know.
I can provide a few examples of where political correctness *has* gone too far and can actually be even counter-productive:
In Slovenia it is rude to call Bosnians "Bosanci", Albanians "Šiptarji" and Gypsies "Cigani" and the official political correct terms for them are: "Bošnjaki", "Albanci" and "Romi".
With first two the problem is that they even officially call _themselves_ "Bosanci" and "Šiptarji" in their own language.
Who is considering it rude? Do the Bosanci consider it rude when you call them Bosanci and prefer that you would use Bošnjaki? Or is it a different set of people who are offended? This is my personal litmus test for navigating the preferred naming of groups (preferred by the groups themselves, that is). There are many cases in American culture at least of groups using a term within themselves that they do not want others to use, but not usually the names used by that population when politely referring to themselves (i.e. generally these terms are loaded slang words appropriated from the dominating culture and internalized in order to redistribute the balance of power that forms around that word.) So I'm wondering if the situation you describe in Slovenia is being driven by these groups, or if those groups would actually prefer to go by the name they call themselves.
With the so called Roma people, the problem is even bigger, since to my knowledge Roma are just one of the tribes. So by having to call _all_ gypsies Roma, you are effectively putting one tribe in front of the others and denying the existence of the others.
I have to ask the same question: Do the tribes in general prefer Romi over Cigani? Also: am I going to far in assuming that any movement to encourage them to all be called by their individual tribal names would inevitably be referred to as pushing a 'politically correct' agenda? In proper synchronistic fashion, I came across this piece today that fits our topic of discussion: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703467304575383131592767868.ht... -- Lost in Translation -- New cognitive research suggests that language profoundly influences the way people see the world; a different sense of blame in Japanese and Spanish "All this new research shows us that the languages we speak not only reflect or express our thoughts, but also shape the very thoughts we wish to express. The structures that exist in our languages profoundly shape how we construct reality, and help make us as smart and sophisticated as we are."