I've been reading all the historical origins discussion. It's seems to me we are
far from concluding that the term 'gypsy' is associated with Romani people. We
have that Cecil Sharp probably heard Morris Dancers using whole and half gip, and
appropriated the movement and term for broader use in country dance, apparently without
investigating origin. And we have a possible association between an Elizabethan? theater
production called the Spanish Gypsy, with a dance of similar name with movement that may
or may not be what we now call gypsy, but was not so named in said dance. We are all
assuming that at some point, someone was referring to the Roma, to their hands free dance,
to their gaze, or something, but we don't know.
That said, the trouble comes on situations like that Amy Wimmer encountered. People from
outside come in, and THEY make the assumption and association. And some feel it is not
politically correct, and take offense. We haven't heard of a case of Romani people
taking offense, presumably because we haven't had any attend a contra? That
doesn't make using the term ok, it just means we have no usable specific data.
Sargon's question therefore remains unanswered. What are the criteria for removing a
term from our vocabulary? What level of provable offense constitutes reason for removal?
Even if the answer is none, it's worth asking ourselves.
Andrea
Sent from my iOnlypretendtomultitask
On Oct 27, 2015, at 11:41 AM, Ron Blechner via Callers
<callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Since "gypsy" as a contra/ECD term almost certainly refers to Romani, it
differs from say, geological terms or whatnot. The swastika is a sad thing, because the
Nazis basically ruined it, even though they use a reverse direction version.
That said, I'm not endorsing or not endorsing the change to the "gypsy"
move, just stating that there are some clear differences.
On Oct 27, 2015 11:20 AM, "Sargon de Jesus
via Callers" <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
This has been a fascinating and edifying conversation regarding how and when to use the
term. At the risk of getting too deep in the philosophical questions regarding use of the
word "gypsy," I have a sincere and seriously non-loaded question about what
conditions must be met in order to justify removing it from our calling vocabulary. Of
course I acknowledge that when use of a pointed term meant to represent a certain group of
people is deemed by that group of people to be offensive, then care should be taken to
eliminate use of such a word (the Washington, D.C. football team comes to mind). There is
no alternate etymology to that term other than the reference to Native Americans (well,
unless their helmets had always featured red-skinned potatoes, of course). But now, in
playing devil's advocate I ask: doesn't context and origin matter for
"gypsy"? Isn't the etymology of the term's use in contra dancing
relevant to whether it can rightfully be cast aside for being an offensive term?
To those who say it doesn't, then how do we reconcile that with offensive terms or
displays that have similar outputs that arose completely independently? For example:
- The four-pointed star common in Jainism is frequently mistaken for a swastika.
- The garb of the "Nazarenos" in Spain look identical to the KKK.
- Geologists liberally use the term "dike/dyke" for a relatively common rock
formation.
- Cracks or fissures in/on surfaces are commonly called "chinks."
- The term "fob" is widely used for certain types of rings on key chains.
If we agree that all of these displays and uses are legitimate and appropriate for
continued use, then doesn't the history of "gypsy" in contra dancing matter?
Or does the surficial cause of offense warrant elimination? Not trying to weasel out of
the situation here, but rather genuinely trying to refine the precise reasoning behind
decisions in contra vocabulary. Curious about any/all perspectives on this -- thanks!
Sargon
On Mon, Oct 26, 2015 at 7:00 PM, Winston, Alan P.
via Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Apologies for putting words in your mouth. I misunderstood what you were saying.
-- Alan
On 10/26/2015 3:51 PM, Colin Hume via Callers
wrote:
> On Mon, 26 Oct 2015 12:48:00 -0700, Alan Winston via Callers wrote:
> I didn't know morris dancers used "gypsy" rather than "gyp",
as you
> say on the web page.
Alan -
I don't believe I say that. I say that Sharp's handwritten notes use
the word "gipsies", and I give links to prove it. I agree that morris
dancers use "gyp".
Colin Hume
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