Friday, August 13, 2010

Dr. Laura and the use/mention distinction


kraut [krout]
noun informal
sauerkraut.
• (also Kraut) informal, offensive a German.*
     I suppose you’ve heard about Dr. Laura Schlessinger’s so-called “rant” in which she repeatedly “used” the “n-word.”
     No she didn’t. She only mentioned it.
     If I tell you that using the term “kraut” to refer to a German is offensive, I have not “used” the term “kraut.” Rather, I have done something else with it. In my field, we say that I have mentioned it.
     See the point?
     Let me cut to the chase. There’s a big difference between Jim’s remark and John’s remark:
Jim: “Get away from me, you Kraut!”
John: “Using the term ‘Kraut’ to refer to Germans is usually offensive.”
     What Jim said is offensive. What John said is anything but offensive.
     Philosophers (and, evidently, linguists) are taught this distinction because it is very important to maintain if one is to avoid confusion. It ain’t rocket science: it is one thing to use a word—that is, to use it in an ordinary sense of using. It is quite another to take a word as a word (or a phrase as a phrase or a sentence as a sentence, etc.) and to discuss it as such. If I say that “nigger” (depending on the context) is a highly offensive term, I am commenting on the term. I am saying that its use can be very offensive. I am in no sense expressing any attitude or judgment about African-Americans! (See also this.)
     In fact, in saying that “nigger” is an offensive term, I am making an important (albeit an obvious) point.**
     I Googled the “use/mention distinction” and found many entries. Wikipedia seems to offer a decent account of the distinction (I skimmed it).
     Linguist Bill Poser has a good discussion of exactly this point—namely, political correctness running afoul of the important use/mention distinction—in this post. He discusses a case in which a professor was found guilty of racial harassment (by his university, Brandeis) for saying in class such things as:
“Mexican migrants in the United States are sometimes referred to pejoratively as 'wetbacks'.”
     According to Poser,
His offense is described as having used the word 'wetback'. This is false. He did not use the word 'wetback'; he mentioned it. That is, he did not choose the word 'wetback' for his own communicative purposes. Rather, he referred to its use by others. This is not a mere distinction of terminology: there is a vast difference between the two. When someone uses a word, he or she is responsible for what it conveys, but when one mentions a word, one assumes no such responsibility.
     Let’s get back to Dr. Laura. What was offensive—or, as I’d prefer to put it, what was ridiculous—was Schlessinger’s position and arguments. Schlessinger seemed to be arguing that, since some blacks freely use the term “nigger” in referring to themselves and others (arguably without offensive intent), it follows that anyone may use that term. But, obviously, context (including evident intent) is important. That’s so basic, I’m embarrassed to have to say it.
     Schlessinger’s point was that the caller, a black woman, who was offended by things her husband’s white friends did around her (asking her how black people like this or do that) was over-sensitive.
     If Schlessinger can’t see why those crackers and their questions would make a perfectly reasonable (i.e., non-oversensitive) person uncomfortable or worse, then she is an idiot. (OK, I'm having a little fun with you. They might not be crackers. Could be cookies.)
     Well, no. Not literally an idiot. You know what I mean.
     But do pull your head out of your ass, lady.

     *(From my Mac's dictionary.)
     **(Naturally, some terms are so toxic that one must take care even to mention them. For instance, it would be foolish to loudly discuss this matter at a cafeteria, freely mentioning the word “nigger” or, say, “fag.” Indeed, some terms are so toxic [to some ears] that even mentioning them produces cringing. Decent people generally seek to avoid causing cringing, though obviously there are exceptions. Healthy people can usually make the necessary adjustments and their cringe response soon ceases. We sometimes discuss people as though they were all experiencing PTSD. And that’s just ridiculous. Let's encourage people to be strong and healthy, not neurotic. But let's be decent and sensitive, too.)

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sure, but we can agree that Schlessinger is a fucking idiot, right? For all sorts of reasons. Sorry if that offended someone.

Roy Bauer said...

Gosh, didn't I say that she "is an idiot"? Sure I did. Do you read only the first half and blow off the rest? Sheesh!

Anonymous said...

Actually, no, you posed a hypothetical, and at the end of the post. Stop being so defensive.

Anonymous said...

Well, fine, but I did not pose a hypothetical. I implied that she is indeed an idiot since, obviously, Schlessinger does not recognize the difference to which I referred. Not all "if/then" statements are really hypotheticals, just as not all questions are actually questions. Know what I mean? (Not really a question.)
My own view is that Schlessinger is very intelligent but manages routinely to say stupid (and insensitive and cluelesss) things, owing to her enthusiasm for and belief in her "conservative" philosophy. Oddly, her kind of conservative is not really conservative at all. I mean, sensitivity to others and courtesy are traditional, too. They are important institutions, the lubricant of civility, from which she manages occasionally to take a holiday, despite being (I'm guessing) a fairly decent person in her interpersonal relationships. BvT

Bohrstein said...

I just watched a bit (just the radio portion). Dr. Laura wasn't exactly using the word with tact. Nor did she seem to have any intent to do so. The constant cutting the woman off, and all the hasty assertions annoyed the hell out of me.

I want to note that the following two approaches are not the same:
"Nigger, nigger, nigger. That is all you hear on HBO."
"The word nigger is used a lot on HBO."

The ideas they convey are the same, but the amount of discretion used is definitely not. Also, "hypersensitivity" is a case by case thing, and to say that "some people are hypersensitive, and you're being too sensitive" is sort of... sloppy.

If it is the case that you and I (e.g.) can't have a conversation because we have to constantly shy away from our feelings, or worse if we constantly talk about how we feel, then we are too sensitive.

For example, I might say that Dr.Laura is too sensitive to the idea that people are sensitive. The first chance she got to dig in to someone about the use of the word, she just about lost it. Or so it seemed to me. I just feel that way because hastily cutting people off, and blurting out that "some people are hypersensitive," and then changing the topic to defend your idea that the woman's feelings about her husbands alleged racist friends is not racism.

She hosts a radio show where people call and talk about their feelings, and she can't even do that properly. Damned fool!

Also, she has a body guard? Whoah.

BS

Roy Bauer said...

BS, I take your point about "discretion" and Dr. Laura. As you know, I've never been a fan of her or her approach.
At any rate, my view is that adults should be able to discuss problematic language like adults. They should be able to hear, "'Nigger' is a toxic word" without going postal. We should be teaching that kind of reasonableness and maturity. Instead, we seem to encourage the notion that an offended party may stop all discussion and insist on displaying their pain, utterly derailing all attempts at reason and discussion.

Roy Bauer said...

BS, I meant to add that you made EXCELLENT points—about Dr. Laura. Sorry it took me this long to notice your comment.

Roy Bauer said...

BTW, BS ("Bohrstein") is a friend, formerly a student of mine (maybe twenty-five or thirty years ago!). Observe that Bohrstein and I have done essentially what these recent fired professors have done: we have dared to mention the n-word in discussing the offensiveness of (some people's) use—and some people's mentioning—of the n-word. That is routine in philosophy, maybe not so much in other disciplines.

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...