Thanks Ron for this point.

A bit of history.

In the ‘70s Carl Wittman created a non-gendered method for English Country Dancing while in Oregon.  It is currently used by several organizations, Heather and Rose in Oregon which he was part of, Sun Assembly in North Carolina - where Carl moved to later, Lavender Country and Folk Dancers at camps, Gender Free English in Jamaica Plain, and perhaps others. It uses positions instead of role  names and sometimes is called Global Terminology.

  http://lcfd.org/gf-ecd-calling-conventions.html

In 1981 a gender free contra dance series called Les be Gay and Dance started  in Minneapolis / St Paul that used a method similar to Carl Wittman’s. It was a bit problematic for some dances.

In 1988 Chris Ricciotti started a Gay and Lesbian Contra Dance series in Jamaica Plain and used conventional terminology. In 1989 one of the dancers said it was insulting to be labeled a lady or a gent and out of that came the Arm Bands and Bare Arms system. Calling a lesbian a guy or a gay man a girl was a too often used insult. One of the points about arm bands is that by wearing a marker it is easy to see what role a person is - sometimes  useful to help redirect beginners. (I note that these days many people don’t wear arm bands - especially because of role setting during a dance. 

Chris then started running weekend dance camps and the organization Lavender Country and Folk Dancers was created to run them and serve as an umbrella for the JP dance and several others.)

In those days these were essentially the only places where men could partner with men with out being insulted - or sometimes assaulted. and terms like queer were used as insults.  We have come a long way since then. Same-sex marriage, nondiscrimination laws,  acceptability in many venues, etc.  We’ve adopted queer as one of the self-referential terms.  At many dances same-sex couples dance freely, role reversal is a lot more common (I recommend to people to try the other role because it helps make you a better dancer).

Chris Ricciotti created  a very interesting historical document on gender free dancing.

http://lcfd.org/GF%20Historical%20Manual.pdf



On Jan 26, 2017, at 12:32 AM, Ron Blechner via Callers <callers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:

Let's please not presume to speak for the feelings of marginalized groups?

Not thinking something is a problem because it doesn't affect you personally is super privileged.

Ron Blechner

On Jan 25, 2017 1:36 PM, "Barbara Groh via Callers" <callers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Michael, if this view makes you a Luddite, sign me up as a member of the Luddite Club.  I think it's realistic to say that the members of all the contra, English, and Square Dance groups will NEVER all agree on which alternative terms to use for ladies and gents, so all these new terms being bounced around will only cause confusion (and some eye-rolling). 

You've already made a solid argument for the Luddite position, so I won't say anything more....except this:  Please, let's not start an argument over whether it's pejorative to use the term Luddite!

Barbara Groh

On Tue, Jan 24, 2017 at 4:55 PM, Michael Barraclough via Callers <callers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
I guess that I am a Luddite. Here's how I see it.

Somewhere between 80-90% of the population is 'straight'. Surely, we
want these people as well to come to our dances.  It can be difficult enough to get past the dance lingo without adding the complexity of renaming labels for people that almost everyone already understands. To me, what really matters is that we run dances where everyone accepts everyone else's sexuality; where individual dancers can feel free to dance either role; where everyone is welcome. I am not convinced that 'non-straight' individuals are put off by the historical labels that we use, rather the lack of the 3 conditions that I have just outlined. 

Census data show the U.S. adult population is about 239m. Searching the
web I can find around 300 contra dances, 150 English Country Dances and
1000 MWSD clubs. My generous guess is that less than 100,000 people go
to these dances, less than 50,000 if we ignore MWSD. Did you know that over 700,000 people in the U.S. own a ferret? That means there are 7x as many people in the USA who own a ferret compared to the number of people who go to our dances! 

Let's put less rather than more barriers in the way of getting those
who don't dance with us (that's 99.6% of the population) to join us.

Michael Barraclough
www.michaelbarraclough.com



On Tue, 2017-01-24 at 16:19 -0500, Ron Blechner via Callers wrote:
> I know I'd appreciate it if people had new suggestions, they'd review
> existing considerations for what makes terms usable. Things like 1:2
> syllable ratio, distinct vowel sounds - these disqualify a lot of
> terms as being unfeasible for the same reason "bare arms / arm bands"
> as terms are not preferable. The PDF spreadsheet that Dugan linked is
> the result of my study with teamwork and sourcing from many dancers.
>
> Best,
> Ron Blechner
>
>
> On Jan 20, 2017 7:28 PM, "Keith Tuxhorn via Callers" <callers@lists.s
> haredweight.net> wrote:
> > This conversation exhausts me,  even though I know and accept it's
> > all part of the folk process.
> >
> > So I will make my one contribution... two terms I thought of a
> > couple weeks ago.
> >
> > Mun and Wem.
> >
> > They sound enough like the current terms that the brains of both
> > callers and dancers can make an easy transition. They're made-up
> > words, so they have no gender. And they're short. And easy to say.
> >
> > Mun and Wem.
> >
> > Okay, I've done my bit.
> >
> > Keith Tuxhorn
> > Springfield IL
> >
> > On Thu, Jan 19, 2017 at 4:04 PM, Dugan Murphy via Callers <callers@
> > lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
> > > Since it was an article about my dance series that started this
> > > conversation about role terms, I'll offer that the primary reason
> > > we chose "jets" and "rubies" as gender-free terms is so that
> > > regular contra dancers from other places can come in and dance
> > > without needing anything to be explained to them since the terms
> > > are pretty similar to "gents" and "ladies."  
> > >
> > > We also took a look at this graphic of Ron Blechner's analysis of
> > > gender-free role terms people have been talking about: http://amh
> > > erstcontra.org/ContraDanceRoleTerms.pdf
> > >
> > > We may not use "jets" and "rubies" forever, but we figured we'd
> > > give it a try.  There didn't seem to be any reasons not to try
> > > and there are certainly plenty of reasons to try.  
> > >
> > > Most men at our dance dance as jets and most women dance as
> > > rubies, but for the few who dance opposite, switch around, or
> > > whose gender expression doesn't fit the man/woman binary, I'd
> > > like to think that formally separating dance roles from gender is
> > > validating in a meaningful way.
> > >
> > > Dugan Murphy
> > > Portland, Maine
> > > dugan at duganmurphy.com
> > >
> > > www.DuganMurphy.com
> > > www.PortlandIntownContraDance.com
> > > www.NufSed.consulting
> > >
> > >
> > > _______________________________________________
> > > Callers mailing list
> > > Callers@lists.sharedweight.net
> > > http://lists.sharedweight.net/listinfo.cgi/callers-sharedweight.n
> > > et
> > >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
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