Astral Codex Ten Podcast feed 2024年07月17日
Give Up Seventy Percent Of The Way Through The Hyperstitious Slur Cascade
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文章探讨了“Jap”一词如何从对“Japanese person”的非正式简称演变成具有歧视含义的用语。原本“Jap”并非贬义词,但随着二战期间对日本人的负面情绪加剧,该词的正面与负面使用比例失衡,最终演变成几乎纯粹的贬义词。现在,几乎只有出于无知或故意冒犯时,人们才会使用这个词。

📖 原始含义:“Jap”最初是对“Japanese person”的自然简写,与“Brit”作为“British person”的简称相似,本无贬义。

🗺️ 历史演变:二战期间,对日本人的负面情绪导致“Jap”一词的使用情境变得负面,与“Japanese person”相比,正面使用比例下降。

🚫 社会反应:随着对“Jap”负面含义的认识,人们开始避免使用,以免被视为对日本人的敌意,而故意冒犯者则更频繁地使用该词。

🏛️ 稳定现状:如今,“Jap”一词几乎完全带有贬义,使用它的人要么极不敏感,要么故意想冒犯日本人,形成了稳定的社会认知。

https://astralcodexten.substack.com/p/give-up-seventy-percent-of-the-way

I.

Someone asks: why is “Jap” a slur? It’s the natural shortening of “Japanese person”, just as “Brit” is the natural shortening of “British person”. Nobody says “Brit” is a slur. Why should “Jap” be?

My understanding: originally it wasn’t a slur. Like any other word, you would use the long form (“Japanese person”) in dry formal language, and the short form (“Jap”) in informal or emotionally charged language. During World War II, there was a lot of informal emotionally charged language about Japanese people, mostly negative. The symmetry broke. Maybe “Japanese person” was used 60-40 positive vs. negative, and “Jap” was used 40-60. This isn’t enough to make a slur, but it’s enough to make a vague connotation. When people wanted to speak positively about the group, they used the slightly-more-positive-sounding “Japanese people”; when they wanted to speak negatively, they used the slightly-more-negative-sounding “Jap”.

At some point, someone must have commented on this explicitly: “Consider not using the word ‘Jap’, it makes you sound hostile”. Then anyone who didn’t want to sound hostile to the Japanese avoided it, and anyone who did want to sound hostile to the Japanese used it more. We started with perfect symmetry: both forms were 50-50 positive negative. Some chance events gave it slight asymmetry: maybe one form was 60-40 negative. Once someone said “That’s a slur, don’t use it”, the symmetry collapsed completely and it became 95-5 or something. Wikipedia gives the history of how the last few holdouts were mopped up. There was some road in Texas named “Jap Road” in 1905 after a beloved local Japanese community member: people protested that now the word was a slur, demanded it get changed, Texas resisted for a while, and eventually they gave in. Now it is surely 99-1, or 99.9-0.1, or something similar. Nobody ever uses the word “Jap” unless they are either extremely ignorant, or they are deliberately setting out to offend Japanese people.

This is a very stable situation. The original reason for concern - World War II - is long since over. Japanese people are well-represented in all areas of life. Perhaps if there were a Language Czar, he could declare that the reasons for forbidding the word “Jap” are long since over, and we can go back to having convenient short forms of things. But there is no such Czar. What actually happens is that three or four unrepentant racists still deliberately use the word “Jap” in their quest to offend people, and if anyone else uses it, everyone else takes it as a signal that they are an unrepentant racist. Any Japanese person who heard you say it would correctly feel unsafe. So nobody will say it, and they are correct not to do so. Like I said, a stable situation.

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歧视用语 语言演变 社会心态
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