Aside from the fact that I feel that "political correctness" has gotten out of
hand in society in general, I would like to point out that words change their intentions
over time as well as within different communities. While it may be true that gypsy was
originally meant as a derogatory term against a certain group of people, in the contra
community it is quite the opposite. Gypsy in Contra actually has two meanings, the first
is the dance move and in fact other moves where you are facing another person (i.e. gypsy
star, gypsy heys) and there are dance gypsies who travel frequently to other dances
outside their home community. Neither one is at all derogatory. Gypsy moves are fun and
moSt people really like them. Dance gypsies are very proud of being one. In no way
whatsoever is the term meant to be derogatory in our community. There are many examples
of this in society, but I will just point out one .. troll. Troll has an original meaning
as a mean mythical creature, who, somewhere along the lines became associated with living
under a bridge. In today's society a troll came to mean someone who reads computer
forums, usually with malicious intentions. But even that has shifted so people refer to
trolling the Internet as reading forums or posts without any intent to post at all. But
you know what troll means to me, as someone who grew up in Michigan? I lived in the
southern peninsula, or "under the bridge" - referring to the Mackinaw bridge).
It is not derogatory, it is funny. I don't think we need to change any term that
used to be derogatory, I would encourage people to recognize that in our society, it has a
different meaning, and a very positive one at that. Language changes over ten and terms
take on all new meanings. If I were to respond to this woman, I would explain to her that
while we recognize that gypsy was originally a derogatory term, gypsies are highly
regarded in our community and explain why.
Janet
Sent from my Verizon Wireless 4G LTE smartphone
In response to this person from your dance I would personally reply with something like:
"I'm sorry that you were offended and take your input seriously. The
"gypsy" move in Contra dancing is shared from English Country Dance, and is a
standardized term in this context. As a result of your input I've raised this issue
with a group of dance leaders I participate in and there may be an opportunity to rename
this move over time. Thanks for coming to our dance and I hope you'll join us
again."
On Sat, Oct 24, 2015 at 3:12 AM, Amy Wimmer via Callers
<callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
In teaching it I wanted to convey that it is a flirty, eye contact sort of move. This
person was obviously offended. I am at a loss for how to respond, except to apologize for
offending.