Susan's Place Logo

News:

Please be sure to review The Site terms of service, and rules to live by

Main Menu

Sweden’s New Gender-Neutral Pronoun: Hen

Started by Felix, April 13, 2012, 10:38:25 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Felix

Slate
Nathalie Rothschild
http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2012/04/hen_sweden_s_new_gender_neutral_pronoun_causes_controversy_.html

Hen was first mentioned by Swedish linguists in the mid-1960s, and then in 1994 the late linguist Hans Karlgren suggested adding hen as a new personal pronoun, mostly for practical reasons. Karlgren was trying to avoid the awkward he/she that gums up writing, and invent a single word "that enables us to speak of a person without specifying their gender. He argued that it could improve the Swedish language and make it more nuanced.

Today's hen champions, however, have a distinctly political agenda. For instance, Lundqvist's book is published by a house named Olika, which means "different or diverse." Olika only publishes books that "challenge stereotypes and obsolete norms and traditions in the world of literature." Its titles include 100 möjligheter Istället för 2! ("100 possibilities instead of 2!"), a book for adults who "want to give children more opportunities in gender-stereotyped everyday life"; and Det var en gång ... en ritbok! ("Once upon a time there was ... a drawing book!"), the first "gender-scrutinizing" drawing book for children that "challenges traditional and diminishing conceptions of girls and boys, men and women."
everybody's house is haunted
  •  

Felix

Sweden's gender-neutral 3rd-person singular pronoun

Language Log
Geoffrey K Pullum
http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/nll/?p=3898#more-3898

I don't know which I would say is likely to be more difficult: eliminating gender stereotypes and inequalities from society or getting a neologism established by fiat in the set of pronouns in a language. And I don't know Sweden (never been there) and I don't know Swedish (never studied it). So I have very little to say, except that our pronoun they was originally borrowed into English from the Scandinavian language family (the Danish spoken by the invaders of northern England about a thousand years ago) and since then has been doing useful service in English as the morphosyntactically plural but singular-antecedent-permitting gender-neutral pronoun known to linguists as singular they.
everybody's house is haunted
  •