To LUGNET HomepageTo LUGNET News HomepageTo LUGNET Guide Homepage
 Help on Searching
 
Post new message to lugnet.generalOpen lugnet.general in your NNTP NewsreaderTo LUGNET News Traffic PageSign In (Members)
 General / 17976
17975  |  17977
Subject: 
Re: Some US-like things about LUGNET (Was Re: Where did you lot spring from?)
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.loc.au, lugnet.general
Date: 
Thu, 4 May 2000 14:00:01 GMT
Viewed: 
105 times
  
Mr L F Braun wrote:

Quick wee nitpicks from a USian with Canadian and British affinities:

Paul Baulch wrote:

Still, LUGNET on the whole feels fairly US-oriented to me, and there are two
major causes of this. ...<snip>


The first aspect is the level of moderation. Being an adult, living in a
culture that is NOT an American culture (despite being, as people say,
somewhat Americanised), I feel irritation at being hampered by guidelines
regarding profanity that are so far into the wholesome family end of the
spectrum as to feel, frankly, ridiculous. If I wish to give any emotionally
emphasis or expressiveness I am forced to use a limited set of the most
firmly US-entrenched slang such as "darned", and can only use words such as
"God" in a religious sense (or for reference as I just did). In my culture
we say "bloody" about as often as USians seem to use "darned", but of course

Here's the nitpick: the injunction against "bloody" has entirely to do with the
British (primarily the English)--it doesn't offend any US-born Americans that I
know.  It's not a matter of US puritanism (I'm convinced that most of that is a
myth, although whether it's our myth or a myth propigated in the rest of the
world is still in the air) but a matter of playing to the safest common
denominator for all.  Don't assume it's all US; but by the same token, keep in
mind that in the English-speaking world the US tail wags the dog because of
sheer demographics--there's almost 300 million USians, ~250 million of whom are
fluent speakers of English (however one defines that in the US, can you tell
I've been grading student papers again?).

And if you make the connection that profanity = colour, you're not being
creative enough.  ;)  I think .loc.au, which I enjoy reading very much--I agree
100% with Paul's extolling of stream-of-consciousness threads--is wonderfully
colourful without resorting to vulgarities.

The second issue, that of constructive criticism, isn't a matter of being
US-centered.  If anything, I'd say that most of the criticism I receive on my
MOCs comes out of the US--and I do give constructive criticism.  Why do you
think that it's a sign of US-centricity?  If you go by sheer volume you have to
run it through the above-mentioned demographic filter, to account for the
plurality of US-based Lugnetters, before you can draw reliable conclusions.

I agree with Paul and others that we should be conscious of how the centre of
Lugnet is perceived, and that it is gravitated towards the US--but I disagree
that the above two points are themselves indicative of where that centre is.

best

LFB (wondering about XFUTting this to .admin.general...?)

Yes, Americans are arrogant (at times), and ethnocentric.  But they are among the
friendliest people in the world.  However, the center of the known universe is
still Billund Denmark!   :-)

Gary Istok



Message is in Reply To:
  Re: Some US-like things about LUGNET (Was Re: Where did you lot spring from?)
 
Quick wee nitpicks from a USian with Canadian and British affinities: (...) Here's the nitpick: the injunction against "bloody" has entirely to do with the British (primarily the English)--it doesn't offend any US-born Americans that I know. It's (...) (25 years ago, 3-May-00, to lugnet.loc.au, lugnet.general)

72 Messages in This Thread:



























Entire Thread on One Page:
Nested:  All | Brief | Compact | Dots
Linear:  All | Brief | Compact
    

Custom Search

©2005 LUGNET. All rights reserved. - hosted by steinbruch.info GbR