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Spivak pronoun

The Spivak pronouns are a set of gender-neutral pronouns in English promulgated on the virtual community LambdaMOO based on pronouns used in a book by American mathematician Michael Spivak. Though not in widespread use, they have been employed in writing for gender-neutral language by those who wish to avoid the standard terms "he/she" or singular they.

Three variants of the Spivak pronouns are in use, Rogers (1890), Elverson (1975), and LambdaMOO (1991), highlighted in the declension table below.

Declension table for Spivak pronoun variants
Variant Subject Object Possessive adjective Possessive pronoun Reflexive
Masculine he laughs I hugged him his heart warmed that is his he loves himself
Feminine she laughs I hugged her her heart warmed that is hers she loves herself
Singular they they laugh I hugged them their heart warmed that is theirs they love themself
Rogers (1890)[1] e laughs I hugged em es heart warmed
Lindsay (1920) ae laughs I hugged aer aer heart warmed that is *aers ae loves *aerself
Elverson (1975)[2] ey laughs I hugged em eir heart warmed that is eirs ey loves emself
"anti-Carlton" (1977)[3] ee laughs *ees heart warmed that is *ees ee loves eeself
Tintajl (1977)[4] em laughs I hugged em ems heart warmed that is ems em loves emself
MacKay (1980) E laughs I hugged E Es heart warmed
Spivak (1983)[a] E laughs I hugged Em Eir heart warmed
LambdaMOO "spivak" (1991)[5][6] e laughs I hugged em eir heart warmed that is eirs e loves emself

The original ey has been argued to be preferable to e, because the latter would be pronounced the same as he in those contexts where he, him, his loses its h sound.[7]

History

The precise history of the Spivak pronouns is unclear, since they appear to have been independently created multiple times, each time likely without knowledge of the previous.

The first recorded[8] use of the pronouns was in a January 1890 editorial by James Rogers, who derives e, es, and em from he and them in response to the proposed "thon".[1] Coincidentally, Scottish author David Lindsay used similar forms ae and aer in his novel A Voyage to Arcturus, referring, however, to non-terrestrial sapients "unmistakably of a third positive sex".

In 1975, Christine M. Elverson of Skokie, Illinois, won a contest by the Chicago Association of Business Communicators to find replacements for "she and he", "him and her", and "his and hers". Her "transgender pronouns" ey, em, and eir were formed by dropping the "th" from they, them, and their.[9] (See 'em.) The article that first reported the pronouns treated them as something of a joke, concluding with the line, "A contestant from California entered the word 'uh' because 'if it isn't a he or a she, it's uh, something else.' So much of eir humor."[2]

Writing in 1977, poet, playwright, and linguist Lillian Carlton submitted a letter to the journal American Speech reporting (and arguing against) the invention by "an American professor" (likely Dr. Donald MacKay[10]) of pronouns based on "the long sound of the vowel e i".[3] Although her primary argument against the proposed word is her assertion that English "already [has] a perfectly good... word that refers to either sex", namely "one", she also raises the observations that "spoken fast, it comes uncomfortably close to the illiterate hisself... [Furthermore], ee sounds too much like he and would therefore be confusing."[3] Similar arguments, along with the desire to distance themselves from the male-centric singular "he" and derivatives, are still a primary factor in the proliferation of constructed pronouns[citation needed].

Also in 1977, Jeffery J. Smith, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy and Humanities at Stanford University, writing under the pen name "Tintajl jefry", proposed "Em" as "a personal noun-pronoun which in itself gives no indication of sex, age, or number, though these may be shown by its context."[4] He proposes a vast number of possible uses for "em", including but not limited to the replacement of "the formal Dear, because em is a thou word, a term of respect for all people, bar none... Dear Em Doe is redundant. Em Doe is enough, and, since it is brief; it makes room for given names: Em John Doe, Em Mary and John Doe, or, better, Em Doe John, Em Doe John and Mary."

The May 1980 issue of American Psychologist reported on another study by MacKay, testing rates at which subjects miscomprehended the gender of a subject in textbook paragraphs when written with he meaning he or she compared with three epicene pronoun sets: E, E, Es, Eself; e, e, es, eself; and tey, tem, ter, temself.[11]

In 1983, a mathematician-educator, Michael Spivak, wrote an AMS-TeX manual, The Joy of TEX: A Gourmet Guide to Typesetting with the AMS-TEX Macro Package (1986), using E, Em, and Eir. His set was similar to Elverson's, but capitalized like one of MacKay's sets.

In May 1991, a MOO programmer, Roger Crew, added "spivak" as a gender setting for players on LambdaMOO, causing the game to refer to such players with the pronouns e, em, eir, eirs, emself. The setting was added along with several other "fake genders" in order to test changes to the software's pronoun code, and was left in place as a novelty. To Crew's surprise, the Spivak setting caught on among the game's players, while the other gender settings were mostly ignored.[12][13]

Other writers applied Elverson's original "th"-dropping rule and revived "ey", such as Eric Klein in his legal code for a planned micronation called Oceania.[14] John Williams's Gender-neutral Pronoun FAQ (2004) promoted the original Elverson set (via Klein) as preferable to other major contenders popular on Usenet (singular they, sie/hir/hir/hirs/hirself, and zie/zir/zir/zirs/zirself).[15]

Usage

Spivak is one of the allowable genders on many MUDs (multi-user dungeon) and MOOs (MUD object-oriented). Others might include some selection of: masculine, feminine, neuter, either, both, "splat", plural, egotistical, royal, and 2nd. The selected gender determines how the game engine refers to a player.

On LambdaMOO, they became standard practice for help texts ("The user may choose any description e likes"), referring to people of unknown gender ("Who was that guest yesterday, eir typing was terrible"), referring to people whose gender was known but without disclosing it ("Yes I've met Squiggle. E was nice."), or of course characters declaring themselves to be of gender Spivak. In recent years (2000 onwards), this usage has been declining.[citation needed]

Nomic games, especially on the Internet, often use Spivak pronouns in their rulesets, as a way to refer to indefinite players.[16]

The visual novel series Magical Diary uses Spivak pronouns in spell descriptions to refer to the caster, and explains them in an event as a part of magical culture necessitated by interaction with nonhuman species.

Spivak pronouns and gender in virtual communities

In online anonymous situations, Spivak and other gender neutral pronouns can be motivated by avoiding gendered speech that would make divisions in the social group more likely and the group possibly less productive or enjoyable.[17] This contact with genderless pronouns in virtual communities is sometimes a person's first experience and experimentation with presenting their gender in a genderqueer or transgender manner.[18]

Publications employing Spivak pronouns

Elverson 1975 set (ey, em, eir)

  • Carter, CJ (2011-05-26). Que Será Serees: What Will Be, Serees?. CJCS Publishing. ISBN 978-0-615-48304-7.
  • Klein, Eric (1993). "Laws of Oceania". Oceania — The Atlantis Project.
  • O'Friel, Morgan (2007). Larkenia's Flaws: Volume 1. Grand Rapids: TheSpindle. ISBN 978-0-615-14753-6.
  • Edwards, RJ (2009–2014). "Riot Nrrd".

"Spivak" 1991 set (e, em, eir)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b The Joy of TeX uses "E", "Em", and "Eir", always capitalized.

References

  1. ^ a b Rogers, James "That Impersonal Pronoun." Editorial. Comp. William Henry Hills The Writer Boston. Jan. 1890, 4th ed.: 12-13. Google Books. Google. Web. Accessed 31 July 2014. [1].
  2. ^ a b Black, Judie. "Ey Has a Word for It." Chicago Tribune 23 Aug. 1975, sec. 1: 12.
  3. ^ a b c Carlton, Lillian E. (1979). "An Epicene Suggestion". American Speech. 54 (2): 156–57. doi:10.2307/455219. JSTOR 455219.
  4. ^ a b jefry [sic.], Tintajl. "Una: The Emerging Language of the World". (Em Institute 1997), pp. 1-4., cited in Lockheed, Marlaine E. Curriculum and Research for Equity: A Training Manual for Promoting Sex Equity in the Classroom. Rep. no. Classroom Guide. Washington, DC.: Women's Educational Equity Act Program (ED), 1982. pp. 110-113 [2]
  5. ^ Anderson, Judy (1992-05-26). "Re: cross-gendered players". Newsgroup: rec.games.mud. Usenet: 1992May26.192745.7155@lucid.com.
  6. ^ From 1998 through 2011, LambdaMOO's "help spivak" output described the spivak set as "E – subject", "Em – objective", "Eir – possessive (adjective)", "Eirs – possessive (noun)" and "Emself – reflexive".
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-02-02.
  8. ^ Baron, Dennis E. (1981). "The Epicene Pronoun: The Word That Failed". American Speech. 56 (2): 83–97. doi:10.2307/455007. JSTOR 455007.
  9. ^ Scanned clipping from Black, Judie (1975-08-23). "Ey has a word for it". Chicago Tribune. p. 12., published in Guest Blogger (2011-07-02). "The Rise of "Transgender"". The Bilerico Project. Retrieved 2011-10-27.
  10. ^ Martyna, Wendy (1980). "Beyond the 'He/Man' Approach: The Case for Nonsexist Language". Signs. 5 (3): 492. doi:10.1086/493733. JSTOR 3173588. S2CID 144075372. Citing Donald G. MacKay, "Birth of a Word," manuscript, Department of Psychology, University of California at Los Angeles. However, if MacKay ever wrote this manuscript, it does not appear on his CV or anywhere else easily discernable.
  11. ^ MacKay, Donald G. (May 1980). "Psychology, Prescriptive Grammar, and the Pronoun Problem" (PDF). American Psychologist. 35 (5): 444–449. doi:10.1037/0003-066x.35.5.444.
  12. ^ Jones, Steve (1998-07-15). CyberSociety 2.0: revisiting computer-mediated communication and community. Sage Publications. ISBN 978-0-7619-1461-7.
  13. ^ Moomail from Rog to Lig, 2001-08-26, quoted in Thomas, Sue (March–April 2003). "Spivak". The Barcelona Review (35). Retrieved 2011-10-27.
  14. ^ Klein, Eric (1993). "Laws of Oceania". Oceania — The Atlantis Project.
  15. ^ Williams, John (2004). . Archived from the original on February 9, 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  16. ^ Martin, W. Eric. Meta-Gaming 101. Games. Issue 193 (Vol. 27, No. 7). Pg.7. September 2003.
  17. ^ Herring, Susan. "Gender Differences in Computer-Mediated Communication: Bringing Familiar Baggage to the New Frontier." Making the Net*Work: Is There a Z39.50 in Gender Communication? American Library Association Annual Convention, Miami. 27 June 1994. Web. 1 Aug. 2014. <http://urd.let.rug.nl/~welling/cc/gender-differences-communication.pdf>
  18. ^ Jones, Steven, Cybersociety 2.0: Revisiting Computer-Mediated Community and Technology, Sage Publications, Inc., United Kingdom, 1998
  19. ^ "Pronouns, Anglish". orionsarm.com. 2001-03-06. Retrieved 2017-07-26.

External links

    spivak, pronoun, gender, neutral, pronouns, english, promulgated, virtual, community, lambdamoo, based, pronouns, used, book, american, mathematician, michael, spivak, though, widespread, they, have, been, employed, writing, gender, neutral, language, those, w. The Spivak pronouns are a set of gender neutral pronouns in English promulgated on the virtual community LambdaMOO based on pronouns used in a book by American mathematician Michael Spivak Though not in widespread use they have been employed in writing for gender neutral language by those who wish to avoid the standard terms he she or singular they Three variants of the Spivak pronouns are in use Rogers 1890 Elverson 1975 and LambdaMOO 1991 highlighted in the declension table below Declension table for Spivak pronoun variants Variant Subject Object Possessive adjective Possessive pronoun ReflexiveMasculine he laughs I hugged him his heart warmed that is his he loves himselfFeminine she laughs I hugged her her heart warmed that is hers she loves herselfSingular they they laugh I hugged them their heart warmed that is theirs they love themselfRogers 1890 1 e laughs I hugged em es heart warmedLindsay 1920 ae laughs I hugged aer aer heart warmed that is aers ae loves aerselfElverson 1975 2 ey laughs I hugged em eir heart warmed that is eirs ey loves emself anti Carlton 1977 3 ee laughs ees heart warmed that is ees ee loves eeselfTintajl 1977 4 em laughs I hugged em ems heart warmed that is ems em loves emselfMacKay 1980 E laughs I hugged E Es heart warmedSpivak 1983 a E laughs I hugged Em Eir heart warmedLambdaMOO spivak 1991 5 6 e laughs I hugged em eir heart warmed that is eirs e loves emselfThe original ey has been argued to be preferable to e because the latter would be pronounced the same as he in those contexts where he him his loses its h sound 7 Contents 1 History 2 Usage 2 1 Spivak pronouns and gender in virtual communities 2 2 Publications employing Spivak pronouns 2 2 1 Elverson 1975 set ey em eir 2 2 2 Spivak 1991 set e em eir 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditThe precise history of the Spivak pronouns is unclear since they appear to have been independently created multiple times each time likely without knowledge of the previous The first recorded 8 use of the pronouns was in a January 1890 editorial by James Rogers who derives e es and em from he and them in response to the proposed thon 1 Coincidentally Scottish author David Lindsay used similar forms ae and aer in his novel A Voyage to Arcturus referring however to non terrestrial sapients unmistakably of a third positive sex In 1975 Christine M Elverson of Skokie Illinois won a contest by the Chicago Association of Business Communicators to find replacements for she and he him and her and his and hers Her transgender pronouns ey em and eir were formed by dropping the th from they them and their 9 See em The article that first reported the pronouns treated them as something of a joke concluding with the line A contestant from California entered the word uh because if it isn t a he or a she it s uh something else So much of eir humor 2 Writing in 1977 poet playwright and linguist Lillian Carlton submitted a letter to the journal American Speech reporting and arguing against the invention by an American professor likely Dr Donald MacKay 10 of pronouns based on the long sound of the vowel e i 3 Although her primary argument against the proposed word is her assertion that English already has a perfectly good word that refers to either sex namely one she also raises the observations that spoken fast it comes uncomfortably close to the illiterate hisself Furthermore ee sounds too much like he and would therefore be confusing 3 Similar arguments along with the desire to distance themselves from the male centric singular he and derivatives are still a primary factor in the proliferation of constructed pronouns citation needed Also in 1977 Jeffery J Smith Emeritus Professor of Philosophy and Humanities at Stanford University writing under the pen name Tintajl jefry proposed Em as a personal noun pronoun which in itself gives no indication of sex age or number though these may be shown by its context 4 He proposes a vast number of possible uses for em including but not limited to the replacement of the formal Dear because em is a thou word a term of respect for all people bar none Dear Em Doe is redundant Em Doe is enough and since it is brief it makes room for given names Em John Doe Em Mary and John Doe or better Em Doe John Em Doe John and Mary The May 1980 issue of American Psychologist reported on another study by MacKay testing rates at which subjects miscomprehended the gender of a subject in textbook paragraphs when written with he meaning he or she compared with three epicene pronoun sets E E Es Eself e e es eself and tey tem ter temself 11 In 1983 a mathematician educator Michael Spivak wrote an AMS TeX manual The Joy of TEX A Gourmet Guide to Typesetting with the AMS TEX Macro Package 1986 using E Em and Eir His set was similar to Elverson s but capitalized like one of MacKay s sets In May 1991 a MOO programmer Roger Crew added spivak as a gender setting for players on LambdaMOO causing the game to refer to such players with the pronouns e em eir eirs emself The setting was added along with several other fake genders in order to test changes to the software s pronoun code and was left in place as a novelty To Crew s surprise the Spivak setting caught on among the game s players while the other gender settings were mostly ignored 12 13 Other writers applied Elverson s original th dropping rule and revived ey such as Eric Klein in his legal code for a planned micronation called Oceania 14 John Williams s Gender neutral Pronoun FAQ 2004 promoted the original Elverson set via Klein as preferable to other major contenders popular on Usenet singular they sie hir hir hirs hirself and zie zir zir zirs zirself 15 Usage EditSpivak is one of the allowable genders on many MUDs multi user dungeon and MOOs MUD object oriented Others might include some selection of masculine feminine neuter either both splat plural egotistical royal and 2nd The selected gender determines how the game engine refers to a player On LambdaMOO they became standard practice for help texts The user may choose any description e likes referring to people of unknown gender Who was that guest yesterday eir typing was terrible referring to people whose gender was known but without disclosing it Yes I ve met Squiggle E was nice or of course characters declaring themselves to be of gender Spivak In recent years 2000 onwards this usage has been declining citation needed Nomic games especially on the Internet often use Spivak pronouns in their rulesets as a way to refer to indefinite players 16 The visual novel series Magical Diary uses Spivak pronouns in spell descriptions to refer to the caster and explains them in an event as a part of magical culture necessitated by interaction with nonhuman species Spivak pronouns and gender in virtual communities Edit In online anonymous situations Spivak and other gender neutral pronouns can be motivated by avoiding gendered speech that would make divisions in the social group more likely and the group possibly less productive or enjoyable 17 This contact with genderless pronouns in virtual communities is sometimes a person s first experience and experimentation with presenting their gender in a genderqueer or transgender manner 18 Publications employing Spivak pronouns Edit Elverson 1975 set ey em eir Edit Carter CJ 2011 05 26 Que Sera Serees What Will Be Serees CJCS Publishing ISBN 978 0 615 48304 7 Klein Eric 1993 Laws of Oceania Oceania The Atlantis Project O Friel Morgan 2007 Larkenia s Flaws Volume 1 Grand Rapids TheSpindle ISBN 978 0 615 14753 6 Edwards RJ 2009 2014 Riot Nrrd Spivak 1991 set e em eir Edit Dibbell Julian 1999 01 20 my tiny life crime and passion in a virtual world Holt Paperbacks ISBN 978 0 8050 3626 8 Hess Elizabeth 2003 Yib s Guide to MOOing Getting the Most from Virtual Communities on the Internet Trafford Publishing ISBN 978 1 4120 0290 5 Love Jane 2000 Ethics Plugged and Unplugged The Pegagogy of Disorderly Conduct In Inman James A Sewell Donna N eds Taking flight with OWLs Examining Electronic Writing Center Work Taylor amp Francis ISBN 0 8058 3171 1 LCC PE1414 T24 1999 Shaviro Steven 1997 Doom Patrols A Theoretical Fiction About Postmodernism London Serpent s Tail ISBN 978 1 85242 430 5 LCCN 96068813 Spivak Michael 1990 04 01 The Joy of TeX A Gourmet Guide to Typesetting with the AMS TeX Macro Package 2nd ed ISBN 978 0 8218 2997 4 a Thomas Sue 2004 03 31 Hello World travels in virtuality Raw Nerve Books ISBN 978 0 9536585 6 5 the Orion s Arm universe 19 Leckie Ann 2017 11 26 Provenance Orbit ISBN 978 0 3163886 3 4 Kobabe Maia 2019 Gender queer a memoir Lion Forge ISBN 978 1549304002 OCLC 1106371004 See also EditGeneric antecedents Ri pronoun Esperanto Elle Spanish pronoun Hen pronoun Swedish Iel pronoun French Elu Portuguese pronoun Gender neutral pronouns NeopronounNotes Edit a b The Joy of TeX uses E Em and Eir always capitalized References Edit a b Rogers James That Impersonal Pronoun Editorial Comp William Henry Hills The Writer Boston Jan 1890 4th ed 12 13 Google Books Google Web Accessed 31 July 2014 1 a b Black Judie Ey Has a Word for It Chicago Tribune 23 Aug 1975 sec 1 12 a b c Carlton Lillian E 1979 An Epicene Suggestion American Speech 54 2 156 57 doi 10 2307 455219 JSTOR 455219 a b jefry sic Tintajl Una The Emerging Language of the World Em Institute 1997 pp 1 4 cited in Lockheed Marlaine E Curriculum and Research for Equity A Training Manual for Promoting Sex Equity in the Classroom Rep no Classroom Guide Washington DC Women s Educational Equity Act Program ED 1982 pp 110 113 2 Anderson Judy 1992 05 26 Re cross gendered players Newsgroup rec games mud Usenet 1992May26 192745 7155 lucid com From 1998 through 2011 LambdaMOO s help spivak output described the spivak set as E subject Em objective Eir possessive adjective Eirs possessive noun and Emself reflexive Poker Mobile Archived from the original on 2014 02 02 Baron Dennis E 1981 The Epicene Pronoun The Word That Failed American Speech 56 2 83 97 doi 10 2307 455007 JSTOR 455007 Scanned clipping from Black Judie 1975 08 23 Ey has a word for it Chicago Tribune p 12 published in Guest Blogger 2011 07 02 The Rise of Transgender The Bilerico Project Retrieved 2011 10 27 Martyna Wendy 1980 Beyond the He Man Approach The Case for Nonsexist Language Signs 5 3 492 doi 10 1086 493733 JSTOR 3173588 S2CID 144075372 Citing Donald G MacKay Birth of a Word manuscript Department of Psychology University of California at Los Angeles However if MacKay ever wrote this manuscript it does not appear on his CV or anywhere else easily discernable MacKay Donald G May 1980 Psychology Prescriptive Grammar and the Pronoun Problem PDF American Psychologist 35 5 444 449 doi 10 1037 0003 066x 35 5 444 Jones Steve 1998 07 15 CyberSociety 2 0 revisiting computer mediated communication and community Sage Publications ISBN 978 0 7619 1461 7 Moomail from Rog to Lig 2001 08 26 quoted in Thomas Sue March April 2003 Spivak The Barcelona Review 35 Retrieved 2011 10 27 Klein Eric 1993 Laws of Oceania Oceania The Atlantis Project Williams John 2004 Gender neutral Pronoun FAQ Archived from the original on February 9 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Martin W Eric Meta Gaming 101 Games Issue 193 Vol 27 No 7 Pg 7 September 2003 Herring Susan Gender Differences in Computer Mediated Communication Bringing Familiar Baggage to the New Frontier Making the Net Work Is There a Z39 50 in Gender Communication American Library Association Annual Convention Miami 27 June 1994 Web 1 Aug 2014 lt http urd let rug nl welling cc gender differences communication pdf gt Jones Steven Cybersociety 2 0 Revisiting Computer Mediated Community and Technology Sage Publications Inc United Kingdom 1998 Pronouns Anglish orionsarm com 2001 03 06 Retrieved 2017 07 26 External links Edit Look up e ey em eir eirs or emself in Wiktionary the free dictionary Gender neutral pronoun FAQ on Aetherlumina com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spivak pronoun amp oldid 1139407727, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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