Language around gender and identity evolves (and always has) | Archie Crowley

102,846 views

2021-04-16 ・ TED


New videos

Language around gender and identity evolves (and always has) | Archie Crowley

102,846 views ・ 2021-04-16

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:00
Transcriber:
0
0
7000
00:12
I am a linguist.
1
12954
2333
00:15
Linguists study language.
2
15329
2375
00:17
And we do this in a lot of different ways.
3
17746
2875
00:20
Some linguists study how we pronounce certain sounds.
4
20663
3041
00:23
Others look at how we build sentences.
5
23704
2542
00:26
And some study how language varies from place to place,
6
26246
3458
00:29
just to name a few.
7
29746
1500
00:31
But what I'm really interested in
8
31663
2000
00:33
is what people think and believe about language
9
33663
3666
00:37
and how these beliefs affect the way we use it.
10
37329
3000
00:41
All of us have deeply held beliefs about language
11
41288
3624
00:44
such as the belief that some languages are more beautiful than others
12
44954
4417
00:49
or that some ways of using language are more correct.
13
49412
3292
00:53
And as most linguists know,
14
53371
2041
00:55
these beliefs are often less about language itself
15
55454
4042
00:59
and more about what we believe about the social world around us.
16
59496
3791
01:04
So I’m a linguist,
17
64371
2250
01:06
and I'm also a nonbinary person,
18
66662
3917
01:10
which means I don't identify as a man or a woman.
19
70579
3583
01:14
I also identify as a member of a broader transgender community.
20
74829
4834
01:20
When I first started getting connected to other transgender people,
21
80913
3291
01:24
it was like learning a whole new language
22
84204
2500
01:26
and the linguist part of me was really excited.
23
86704
3042
01:30
There was a whole new way of talking about my relationship with myself
24
90288
3958
01:34
and a new clear way to communicate that to other people.
25
94246
3750
01:38
And then I started having conversations with my friends and family
26
98496
5917
01:44
about what it meant for me to be trans and nonbinary,
27
104413
4791
01:49
what those words meant to me specifically,
28
109246
3417
01:52
and why I would use both of them.
29
112663
2416
01:56
I also clarified the correct words they could use when referring to me.
30
116579
5167
02:02
For some of them, this meant some very specific changes.
31
122538
4166
02:07
For example, some of my friends
32
127496
2417
02:09
who are used to talking about our friend group as “ladies” or “girls”
33
129913
4916
02:14
switched to nongendered terms like “friends” or “pals.”
34
134871
4875
02:20
And my parents can now tell people that their three kids are their son,
35
140246
5042
02:25
their daughter and their child.
36
145329
2167
02:28
And all of them would have to switch the pronouns they used to refer to me.
37
148621
4583
02:33
My correct pronouns are “they” and “them,”
38
153954
3375
02:37
also known as the singular they.
39
157329
2167
02:41
And these people love me,
40
161163
3333
02:44
but many of them told me that some of these language changes
41
164538
3375
02:47
were too hard or too confusing
42
167954
3084
02:51
or too ungrammatical for them to pick up.
43
171038
2750
02:55
These responses led me to the focus of my research.
44
175038
3333
02:58
There are commonly held,
45
178413
1958
03:00
yet harmful and incorrect beliefs about language
46
180413
4125
03:04
that for the people who hold these beliefs,
47
184579
2500
03:07
act as barriers to building and strengthening relationships
48
187121
3875
03:10
with the transgender people in their families and communities,
49
190996
3667
03:14
even if they want to do so.
50
194704
1875
03:17
Today, I'm going to walk you through some of these beliefs
51
197621
3750
03:21
in the hope that we can embrace creativity in our language
52
201371
3500
03:24
and allow language to bring us closer together.
53
204913
2375
03:28
You might see your own beliefs reflected in these experiences in some way,
54
208371
5000
03:33
but no matter what,
55
213371
1583
03:34
I hope that I can share with you some linguistic insights
56
214996
2708
03:37
that you can put into your back pocket
57
217704
1834
03:39
and take with you out into the world.
58
219579
1792
03:41
And I just want to be super clear.
59
221788
1791
03:43
This can be fun.
60
223579
1459
03:45
Learning about language brings me joy,
61
225079
2459
03:47
and I hope that it can bring you more joy too.
62
227579
2834
03:51
So do you remember how I said that for some of my friends and family
63
231371
4708
03:56
learning how to use the singular they was really hard,
64
236121
2875
03:59
and they said it was too confusing or too ungrammatical for them to pick up.
65
239038
4916
04:04
Well, this brings us to the first belief about language that people have.
66
244621
4333
04:09
Grammar rules don't change.
67
249663
2041
04:13
As a linguist, I see this belief a lot out in the world.
68
253829
4167
04:18
A lot of language users believe that grammar just is what it is.
69
258038
4666
04:22
When it comes to language,
70
262704
1500
04:24
what's grammatical is what matters.
71
264246
1708
04:25
You can't change it.
72
265954
1625
04:28
I want to tell you a story about English in the 1600s.
73
268371
3167
04:31
Back then, as you might imagine,
74
271871
1875
04:33
people spoke differently than we do today.
75
273746
2625
04:36
In particular, they used "thou" when addressing a single other person,
76
276371
4500
04:40
and "you" when addressing more than one other person,
77
280913
3708
04:45
But for some complex historical reasons
78
285163
2375
04:47
that we don't have time to get into today,
79
287579
2250
04:49
so you'll just have to trust me as a linguist here,
80
289871
2417
04:52
but people started using "you" to address someone,
81
292288
2916
04:55
regardless of how many people they were talking to.
82
295246
2583
04:58
And people had a lot to say about this.
83
298163
3541
05:02
Take a look at what this guy, Thomas Elwood, had to say.
84
302038
3083
05:05
He wrote,
85
305121
1208
05:06
"The corrupt and unsound form of speaking in the plural number
86
306371
5375
05:11
to a single person,
87
311788
2000
05:13
‘you’ to one instead of ‘thou,’
88
313788
3000
05:16
contrary to the pure, plain and single language of truth,
89
316788
5416
05:22
‘thou’ to one and ‘you’ to more than one.”
90
322246
3375
05:25
And he goes on.
91
325954
2084
05:28
Needless to say,
92
328496
1208
05:29
this change in pronouns was a big deal in the 1600s.
93
329704
3667
05:34
But actually, if you followed the debates about the singular they at all,
94
334329
3959
05:38
these arguments might sound familiar to you.
95
338329
2625
05:41
They're not that far off from the bickering we hear
96
341413
2750
05:44
about the so-called grammaticality of pronouns
97
344204
2625
05:46
used to talk about trans and nonbinary people.
98
346871
2417
05:50
One of the most common complaints about the singular they
99
350163
3000
05:53
is that if "they" is used to refer to people in the plural,
100
353204
3459
05:56
it can't also be used to talk about people in the singular,
101
356704
3667
06:00
which is exactly what they said about “thou” and “you.”
102
360413
3375
06:04
But as we have seen, pronouns have changed.
103
364288
3708
06:08
Our grammar rules do change
104
368579
2375
06:10
and for a lot of different reasons.
105
370954
2334
06:14
And we're living through one of these shifts right now.
106
374038
3750
06:19
All living languages will continue to change,
107
379288
2708
06:22
and the Thomas Elwoods of the world
108
382038
1916
06:23
will eventually have to get with the program
109
383996
2458
06:26
because hundreds of years later,
110
386496
2125
06:28
it's considered right to use "you" when addressing another person.
111
388663
4541
06:33
Not just allowable, but right.
112
393496
2917
06:38
The second belief about language that people have
113
398079
2709
06:40
is that dictionaries provide official, unchanging definitions for words.
114
400829
4917
06:46
When you were in school,
115
406704
1334
06:48
did you ever start an essay with a sentence like,
116
408038
2750
06:50
"The dictionary defines history as ..."
117
410829
3709
06:54
Well, if you did, which dictionary were you talking about?
118
414579
4000
06:58
Was it the Oxford English Dictionary?
119
418621
3333
07:01
Was it Merriam Webster?
120
421996
1667
07:04
Was it Urban Dictionary?
121
424454
1750
07:06
Did you even have a particular dictionary in mind?
122
426538
3125
07:10
Which one of these is “the dictionary?”
123
430413
2583
07:14
Dictionaries are often thought of as the authority on language.
124
434288
3875
07:18
But dictionaries, in fact, are changing all the time.
125
438204
2792
07:21
And here's where our minds are really blown.
126
441871
2542
07:24
Dictionaries don't provide a single definition for words.
127
444454
3834
07:28
Dictionaries are living documents
128
448621
2292
07:30
that track how some people are using language.
129
450954
3334
07:35
Language doesn't originate in dictionaries.
130
455038
2750
07:38
Language originates with people
131
458163
2416
07:40
and dictionaries are the documents that chronicle that language use.
132
460621
4083
07:45
Here's one example.
133
465413
1750
07:47
We currently use the word "awful"
134
467204
2000
07:49
to talk about something that is bad or gross.
135
469246
4083
07:54
But before the 19th century, "awful" meant just the opposite.
136
474038
3958
07:58
People used "awful" to talk about something
137
478454
2250
08:00
that was deserving of respect
138
480746
1792
08:02
or full of awe.
139
482579
1959
08:06
And in the mid-1900s,
140
486079
1792
08:07
"awesome" was the word that took up these positive meanings
141
487871
3250
08:11
and "awful" switched to the negative one we have today.
142
491163
3083
08:14
And dictionaries over time reflected that.
143
494538
2791
08:18
This is just one example of how definitions and meanings
144
498704
2750
08:21
have changed over time.
145
501454
1417
08:22
And to keep up with it, how dictionaries are updated all the time.
146
502871
3250
08:27
So I hope you're starting to feel a little more comfortable
147
507413
2791
08:30
with the idea of changing language.
148
510246
2208
08:32
But of course, I'm not just talking about language in general.
149
512913
3125
08:36
I'm talking about language as it is impactful for trans people.
150
516079
3042
08:39
And pronouns are only one part of language,
151
519996
2792
08:42
and they're only one part of language that's important for trans people.
152
522829
3542
08:46
Also important are the identity terms
153
526412
2125
08:48
that trans people use to talk about ourselves,
154
528579
2625
08:51
such as trans man, trans woman, nonbinary or gender queer.
155
531246
6375
08:58
And some of these words have been documented in dictionaries
156
538787
3042
09:01
for decades now
157
541871
1416
09:03
and others are still being added year after year.
158
543329
3042
09:06
And that's because dictionaries are working to keep up with us,
159
546912
3834
09:10
the people who are using language creatively.
160
550787
2834
09:14
So at this point, you might be thinking,
161
554579
2958
09:17
"But Archie, it seems like every trans person has a different word
162
557579
3833
09:21
they want me to use for them.
163
561454
1875
09:23
There are so many opportunities for me to mess up or to look ignorant
164
563329
4583
09:27
or to hurt someone's feelings.
165
567954
1958
09:29
What is something I can memorize
166
569954
2625
09:32
and reliably employ when talking to the trans people in my life?"
167
572621
4166
09:37
Well, that brings us to the third belief about language that people have.
168
577579
4625
09:42
You can't just make up words.
169
582746
2083
09:45
Folks, people do this all the time.
170
585787
2334
09:48
Here's one of my favorite examples.
171
588162
2000
09:50
The "official" term for your mother's mother
172
590204
2875
09:53
or your father's mother is grandmother.
173
593121
2875
09:56
I recently polled my friends
174
596579
1667
09:58
and asked them what they call their grandmothers.
175
598287
3042
10:02
We don't get frustrated if your friend's grandma goes by Meemaw
176
602371
4000
10:06
and yours goes by Gigi.
177
606412
2084
10:08
We just make rather short work of it
178
608537
1959
10:10
and memorize it and move on getting to know her.
179
610496
3083
10:14
In fact, we might even celebrate her by gifting her with a sweatshirt
180
614329
4500
10:18
or an embroidered pillow that celebrates the name she has chosen for herself.
181
618829
4125
10:24
And just like your Nana and your grandma,
182
624496
3208
10:27
trans people have every right to choose their own identifying language.
183
627746
4166
10:32
The process of determining self-identifying language
184
632662
3125
10:35
is crucial for trans people.
185
635829
1833
10:38
In my research,
186
638121
1208
10:39
many trans people have shared that finding new vocabulary
187
639329
3083
10:42
was an important part of understanding their own identities.
188
642412
3584
10:46
As one person I interviewed put it,
189
646621
1916
10:48
"Language is one of the most important personal things
190
648579
3667
10:52
because using different words to describe myself
191
652287
2417
10:54
and then finding something that feels good, feels right,
192
654704
4042
10:58
is a very introspective and important process.
193
658746
3375
11:02
With that process you can piece together,
194
662537
2959
11:05
with the language that you find out works best for you,
195
665496
3500
11:09
who am I?"
196
669037
1542
11:11
Sometimes the words that feel good are already out there.
197
671787
3625
11:15
For me, the words trans and nonbinary just feel right.
198
675412
4084
11:20
But sometimes the common lexicon doesn’t yet hold
199
680162
3000
11:23
the words that a person needs to feel properly understood.
200
683162
2875
11:26
And it's necessary and exciting to get to create and redefine words
201
686787
4167
11:30
that better reflect our experience of gender.
202
690954
2792
11:34
So this is a very long answer, but, yes,
203
694496
3625
11:38
I'm absolutely going to give you a magic word,
204
698121
3041
11:41
something really easy you can memorize.
205
701204
2250
11:43
And I want you to think of this word
206
703912
1750
11:45
as the biggest piece of advice I could give you
207
705662
2584
11:48
if you don't know what words to use for the trans people in your life.
208
708246
3916
11:53
Ask.
209
713871
1625
11:55
I might be a linguist and a trans person
210
715829
3625
11:59
and a linguist who works with trans people,
211
719496
2625
12:02
but I'm no substitute for the actual trans people in your life
212
722162
4750
12:06
when it comes to what words to use for them.
213
726954
2708
12:10
And you're more likely to hurt someone's feelings by not asking
214
730662
4625
12:15
or assuming
215
735287
1375
12:16
than you are by asking.
216
736662
1667
12:19
And the words that a person uses might change.
217
739329
3417
12:23
So just commit to asking and learning.
218
743079
3458
12:27
Language is a powerful tool
219
747204
2583
12:29
for explaining and claiming our own identities
220
749787
3667
12:33
and for building relationships that affirm and support us.
221
753454
3625
12:38
But language is just that, a tool.
222
758079
3167
12:41
Language works for us,
223
761287
1959
12:43
not the other way around.
224
763287
1667
12:45
All of us, transgender and cisgender
225
765496
3250
12:48
can use language to understand ourselves
226
768787
3167
12:51
and to respect those around us.
227
771996
2625
12:55
We're not bound by what words have meant before,
228
775746
3875
12:59
what order they might have come in
229
779621
2041
13:01
or what rules we have been taught.
230
781704
2250
13:04
We can consider the beliefs that we might have had
231
784746
3166
13:07
about how language works
232
787912
2084
13:09
and recognize that language will continue to change.
233
789996
3500
13:13
And we can creatively use language
234
793954
2750
13:16
to build the identities and relationships that bring us joy.
235
796746
4500
13:21
And that's not just allowable.
236
801287
1875
13:23
It's right.
237
803162
1250
13:24
Believe me.
238
804412
1209
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7