Posted on 09/29/2014 9:27:32 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Last week, Vice President Biden referred to Singapores former long-serving prime minister Lee Kuan Yew as the wisest man in the Orient. Biden was criticized for saying Orient, which is a perfectly innocuous and rather charming word. Unfortunately, it appears that, at some point, someone decided it was racist, and instead of being corrected, he was indulged.
Its not clear why anyone thinks the words Orient and Oriental are racist. Orient, according to the OED, refers to that region of the heavens in which the sun and other heavenly bodies rise; conventionally, it means east. Strictly, an Oriental country is a land of the rising sun; idiomatically, its a land in East Asia. Presumably, a rising sun is included on certain Oriental flags as a reminder of which adjective the enflagged wish not to be associated with.
In 2002, the state of Washington banned the use in state documents of the adjective Oriental to describe people of East Asian extraction. New York followed suit in 2009. Following the New York ban, an Asian pop columnist was asked, on NPR, Why is Oriental such a loaded term? Why do Asian-Americans find it offensive?
He answered: Well, you know, I think history really does play a huge role in this. And when you think about it, the term Oriental itself kind of feels freighted with luggage. You know, its a term which you cant think of without having that sort of smell of incense and the sound of a gong kind of in your head.
So, some people think Oriental is racist for the same reason anyone who uses it uses it: Its poetic, its evocative, it has character. People use the word Orient for the same reason the Cubs still play at Wrigley Field. Its the reason Frank Lloyd Wright used the word Usonian to replace the bland and imprecise word American. Usonian never caught on, and now Oriental is being choked to death and replaced with the flavorless, meaningless adjective Asian. Does Asian mean East Asian, or does it mean Russian, or East Turkish? Of course, Oriental is pretty broad too but its no broader, culturally, than Slavic, is it? Or Balkan? Shall we abolish the world Celtic and replace it with European?
Orient is just one member of an unfortunate group: inoffensive words being shunned out of an excess of caution. As you might say someone from Spain is a Spaniard, people have taken to saying someone from China is a Chinese. Obviously, thats incorrect Chinese is an adjective; what you want there is a noun. The noun is Chinaman, like Englishman, or Frenchman, but it has become verboten. Japanese is misused in the same way. Im not sure what the noun is. Jap is universally regarded as racist, and I wont argue that it isnt though Im not sure why its more offensive than Brit or Swede or Finn. You wouldnt say, Hes a Jewish.
I am not defending the use of the word Jap its not inherently racist, but thats the convention; its too late to save it. Im not defending offending people for no reason. I am, though, defending the use of the word Orient.
Its not too late for Orient. If we tacitly accept the abolition of distinctive words because people mistake their distinctiveness for offensiveness, soon we wont have any interesting words left. (First they came for Orient, and I did not speak out, because I never used Orient; then they came for bagel, and I did not speak out, because there were no inoffensive nouns or adjectives left.) Anyway, Mr. Biden should be forgiven. Surely, his word choice was occidental.
Josh Gelernter writes weekly for NRO and is a regular contributor to The Weekly Standard.
All this new sensitivity has nothing to do with reacting to racism. It has to do with control.
i do not know, but after working in Human Resources for years, i do not use it... anyway, Oriental is less specific than Asian... Orient, Asia...
I wonder if the EU will ban the “Orient Express.”
Agatha Christie is a Racist!
This is the way it always is. When one our masters breaks one of the arbitrary ridiculous rules we all have to live by, people say “but that rule is arbitrary and ridiculous”. Of course, this sudden attack of logic only lasts until the next time a peasant breaks the rule.
Laws unevenly applied are not laws, they are tyranny.
Frankly, I am surprised to see the return of “The Levant” as an acceptable description of the middle east.
The Orient means the East. It is a traditional designation for anything that belongs to the Eastern world or the Middle East (aka Near East) or the Far East, in relation to Europe. In English, it is largely a metonym for, and coterminous with, the Continent of Asia.
it’ll immediately become an insult when a republican says it .
Let Ted Cruz say something like that and I doubt he would get by with merely being “criticized”
RE: I wonder if the EU will ban the Orient Express.
Agatha Christie is a Racist!
Whoever invented the sport of ORIENTEERING must be racist /s
I think it’s because it’s only “oriental” — Eastern — if you focus on the West as being the relative center. Of course, that begs the question of what constitutes the “West.”
“Oriental” is a perfectly charming word. I think I’ll return to using it instead of the PC “Asian.”
RE: I could never figure that one out either. Occidental is okay.
OK, I should not lose my ORIENTation next time. Maybe I could lose my OCCIDENTation instead? :)
So, we should all be NIGGARDly with the use of words now?
I wonder whether the Lo family, owners of the Oriental Jade Restaurant here in Bangor, is aware that they’ve been committing acts of racism against themselves all these years.
“Orient” and “Oriental” can include not only all of Asia but southeastern Europe and even North Africa.
Northwest Airlines chose to change their name by dropping “Orient” in the 80s.
Or “Celestials”
If you live between the Bosphorus and the Bering Strait, you’re an Asian.
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