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« On the pieing of Medea Benjamin | Main | How to Remember (poem) »

Saturday, July 07, 2007

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Alison

Yep. On the other hand, it's not just us: the French word for people from the US is américain. Then there are canadiens and méxicains. And so on. (Also, the French don't differentiate between North and South America, but that's another story...)

Off to read the NYT article.

Alison

Oh, duh! The first paragraphs of the article said the same thing I did! :-)

HumanityCritic

I never thought of it like that before - that will hit me every time I refer to anyone as an "american". Peace.

Humanity F Critic

Camel Light

That's true. Being an american commonly in the U.S.refers to people with U.S. citizenship, but not necessary that each individual identifies her/himself as anything. A way the mainstream media or patriotic politicians use has sense of nationalism, manupulating peoples' mind based on notion of a nation-state. Even this dividing force of people by nationality is something that needs to be overcome over separation. sometimes hard to be aware of myself about language I use when breaking my streotypes of images and what I see objects in actuality. If I with Korean ethnicity were born in Italy,sharing Italian and manners and rhetorical differences other Italians with Cacasian background share , then come to the U.S., Would I be an Italian or categorized as Asian or Korean? your realization brings up more question in ways we live in "society" and how the mainstream media presents and shapes ways people think and rationalize daily political and economic issues. Thanks!

Daniel

Next time people of United States of America should choose a REAL original name for their country. I hate use "american" word for people of USA. This, and the Imperial unit system, are main reasons for not move to Gringoland. But, maybe, someday.. who knows ;-) -- Daniel from Perú. PS. must be "estadounidenses", together, without hyphen.

prof black woman

I was reading this and laughing b/c I do the same thing, ie always marking the U.S. as N. America and its citizens as N. Americans. (One of my students finally picked up on it one term and did her best to trip me up.) Then I realized, it is because I speak Spanish an spend less and less time in the states with every passing year.

I wonder how someone who only speaks N. American English, has never left the country, and never spoken to people from other parts of the Americas who are quick to point this failing out, would think about this conversation . . .

D

It's interesting to note that this is also the way it is in Russian. (That is, the word for people from the U.S. is Americans.)

Vergingwriter

Language usage can often point to our cultural/political "blindspots" because the "correctness" of terminology, after and while, is taken for granted. This encounter of yours with this young woman points to an imperialist use of a term I am guilty of not having thought through, i.e. I took it for granted. Guilty as charged.

Summer

I had the same topic come up in Barcelona during a conversation with a wonderfully animated girl from Peru. She had a very well reasoned rant against the term American in reference to those from the U.S. I'd never thought of it before either, but it made perfect sense.

I agree whole-heartedly with your conclusion.

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