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(a)lists.sharedweight.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(a)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://amherstcontra.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(a)lists.sharedweight.net
 
http://lists.sharedweight.net/listinfo.cgi/callers-sharedweight.net
 
 _______________________________________________
 Callers mailing list
 Callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net
 
http://lists.sharedweight.net/listinfo.cgi/callers-sharedweight.net