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.
Filipinos don’t exactly feel Asian or Oriental...They enjoy their Spanish and American influence...they have their own thing going on.
Sorry, but when I think Oriental my mind goes west.
The Left depends heavily, as one of its tools of control, on manipulation of guilt. To do this they have to keep inventing new thought crimes.
Then they offer themselves as absolution. Align yourself with them and you are redeemed.
Japan called itself that in reference to China. Viewed from China, the sun did seem to rise over Japan. I think it was a way of countering the Chinese reference to the Japanese as the “Island Dwarves”
that is my understanding... it can include even parts of North Africa... India to Thailand... all inclusive... and that may be why it is offensive... because it is lumping all those ethnicities altogether...
bada-BING!
Give us a break with this political correctness crap. Now that we use the term white Americans, black Americans, its time to call Asians, yellow Americans and Hispanics, brown Americans. Now we need a color for Arabs.
Somehow I just don’t picture India being in the Orient.
Regards,
Do Germans call Asians Asiaten? or Orientalisch?
Let’s just call it the “O word.”
Sometime in the Middle Ages, the Pope declared (because he does these things) that only a certain kind of map could be used to portray the known world. These were called "T in O" maps.
Here's one now:
People like to orient maps so that North is at the top. Notice that "Asia" is right up top on the Papal-approved map?
Coincidence?
Speaking of Germans, Metternich said that “Asia begins at the Landstrasse” (a street in Vienna leading in the direction of Hungary).
Nice clean map but a little lacking in detail. It's hard to make out the "boot" of the Italian peninsula, for example.
” he’s likely to think you’re refering to a muslim........”
—
Or an Indian.
.
Maybe renaming universities with "East" in their name as "Oriental" would be a start.
Oriental Tennessee State University
Oriental Connecticut State University
Oriental Stroudsburg University of Pennsylvania
Oriental Kentucky University
Joel, Joel, Joel.... It’s only racist if a republican says it. Come on, get with the program!
It seems that they usually refer to them as Asiaten, although I haven't heard that term very often in conversation, broadcasts, etc. "Morgenländer" (orientals) seems to be more of a poetic reference, as is "Abenländer" (occidentals).
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