(First published in Stuff regional papers and on Stuff.co.nz, January 9.)
At the end of each year, dictionaries like to highlight
significant new words or phrases that have entered the English language over
the previous 12 months.
The Collins English Dictionary declared “single-use” its
word of the year for 2018, a year when disposable plastic supermarket bags
became a symbol of wasteful consumerism and environmental harm.
Observant readers will note that “single-use” is actually
two words, but then so was “fake news”, which was Collins’ word of the year for
2017.
The Oxford Dictionary’s Word of the Year in 2017 was
“youthquake”, which was defined as “a
significant cultural, political, or social change arising from the actions or
influence of young people”.
Oxford’s
lexicographers chose it because of the role young voters played in that year’s
British general election, which nearly delivered an upset victory for Jeremy
Corbyn’s Labour Party. Corbyn’s brand of cloth-cap socialism struck a chord
with the impressionable young, who are not old enough to know that socialism
always turns out badly.
Oxford’s choice
for the year just ended was “toxic”, a word that cropped up in a variety of
contexts. We had toxic relationships, toxic cultures, toxic waste, toxic chemicals
and “toxic masculinity” – a feminist label for appalling male behaviour as
perpetrated by the likes of Harvey Weinstein.
It can be seen
from the above examples that the word of the year typically reveals something
about the mood of the times. Others included “Brexit” (Collins, 2016) and
“post-truth” (Oxford, same year).
Which leads me,
in a roundabout way, to my own word of the year – except that, like Collins,
I’ve cheated and gone for a phrase that consists of two words.
My phrase of
the year is “unconscious bias”. This is something you’re guilty of if you’re
white and middle-class, and more so if you’re male, able-bodied and
heterosexual.
If you tick
those boxes, you are automatically considered to hold an unconscious bias
against people who are none of those things – in other words women, people of
colour, people who identify as gay, lesbian or trans-gender, and those with
disabilities.
At least this
is what we’re told by people who promote the concept of unconscious bias. And
we just have to accept that they must be right, because the essence of
unconscious bias is that you don’t know you have it.
Most New
Zealanders may think of themselves as fair-minded, tolerant and full of
goodwill toward their fellow human beings, but those who accuse them of unconscious
bias know better. They know that beneath our smug complacency, most of us
seethe with malice and are determined to maintain our status in society by
crushing those less privileged.
The genius of
the phrase “unconscious bias” is that people who are accused of harbouring it
can’t deny it, because by definition they’re unaware of it. They are expected
to stare shame-facedly at the floor and admit they’re guilty even though they
never realised it.
In fact the act
of denying guilt may serve to confirm it. At a seminar on hate speech last
year, I heard one speaker assert that “the heartbeat of racism is denial”. In other words,
if you deny you’re racist, you probably are. In this topsy-turvy, Kafka-esque
world, you’re condemned either way.
While logic
dictates that there probably is such a thing as unconscious bias, I believe its
grip on society is grossly overstated, the aim being to heap guilt and shame on
white middle-class people so that they meekly comply with activists’ demands
for special treatment of supposedly oppressed minority groups.
Of course,
unconscious bias wasn’t the only new term we had to get our heads around in 2018. Another was the adjective “woke”, which derives from “awake” and came into
common usage as a result of America’s Black Lives Matter movement. If you’re
“woke”, you’re alert to racism and social justice issues.
Meanwhile, in
Britain, the political insult du jour is to call someone a gammon. An English term for ham, gammon is used to
refer to pale-skinned men on the conservative side of politics who supposedly
resemble pigs.
“Gammon” is
closely related to the phrase “stale, pale and male”, which was also frequently
heard in 2018. All other stereotypes
based on sex, age and skin colour are strictly forbidden, but older white men
are the one demographic group that it’s okay – in fact almost mandatory – to
disparage.
But at least
this ideological contradiction throws up the occasional humorous irony, as
exemplified by the impeccably “woke” Auckland columnist who wrote a furious
rant about pale, stale males only months after turning 60 himself.
Either it was
an unconscious expression of self-loathing, or he somehow imagines he’s been
sprinkled with fairy dust which renders him magically exempt from the label.
5 comments:
Mr du Fresne, you excel yourself! That was a brilliantly written piece about the mindsets of the precious petals, and snowflakes, of our present society. 'Nuff said.
Karl, who was the columnist you mention who turned 60 after writing his piece on pale, male and stale.
It was Paul Little of the Herald.
P.S. He wrote his column after turning 60, not before.
OK, thanks. Will look it up though I will probably be mad as hell after reading it, being 66 myself.
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