Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Defining English gender
- 2 The gender shift in histories of English
- 3 A history of gender, people, and pronouns: the story of generic he
- 4 Third-person pronouns in the gender shift: why is that ship a she?
- 5 Gender and asymmetrical word histories: when boys could be girls
- 6 Implications for nonsexist language reform
- Appendix 1 Background on early English personal pronouns
- Appendix 2 Helsinki Corpus texts and methodology
- References
- Index
1 - Defining English gender
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Defining English gender
- 2 The gender shift in histories of English
- 3 A history of gender, people, and pronouns: the story of generic he
- 4 Third-person pronouns in the gender shift: why is that ship a she?
- 5 Gender and asymmetrical word histories: when boys could be girls
- 6 Implications for nonsexist language reform
- Appendix 1 Background on early English personal pronouns
- Appendix 2 Helsinki Corpus texts and methodology
- References
- Index
Summary
Introduction
In the fifth century BC, according to Aristotle's account, Protagoras first created the labels masculine, feminine, and neuter for Greek nouns, and language scholars have been trying to explain the relationship of grammatical gender categories to the world around them ever since. Protagoras himself, apparently anxious that the grammatical gender of nouns and the sex of their referents did not always correspond in Greek, is said to have wanted to change the gender of Greek menis ‘anger’ and peleks ‘helmet,’ both of which are feminine nouns, to masculine because he felt the masculine was more appropriate given the words' referents (Robins 1971 [1951]: 15–16). Despite Aristotle's subsequent proposal of grammatical reasons for nominal gender classes, the original labels persisted in the descriptions of gender in classical grammars – and, therefore, in all the later Western grammars modeled on them – and these labels have created the pervasive misperception that grammatical gender categories in a language reflect a connection between male and female human beings and masculine and feminine inanimate objects. The terms deceptively imply a link between the categories in the natural gender system of Modern English – in which there is a clear correlation between masculine and feminine nouns and biological traits in the referent – and the categories in the grammatical gender systems of other Indo-European languages; in fact, these two types of systems are distinct.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Gender Shifts in the History of English , pp. 11 - 30Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003