OzLuke
Well-known member
@cultured_bogan said in [Politics Super Thread \- keep it all in here](/post/1304112) said:@ozluke said in [Politics Super Thread \- keep it all in here](/post/1304089) said:@tiger_one said in [Politics Super Thread \- keep it all in here](/post/1304088) said:@ozluke said in [Politics Super Thread \- keep it all in here](/post/1304087) said:On the plus side, now academics have labeled me a "non-birthing parent" and my wife a "gestational parent".....
Nothing like living in the enlightened all inclusive 2021.....
Seriously?!?!
*Academics at the nation’s top university have told staff to stop using the word “mother’’ and replace it with “gestational parent”, while a “father’’ should now be referred to as a “non-birthing parent” in order to deliver gender-inclusive education.
The Australian National University’s Gender Institute Handbook instructs tutors and lecturers to use terms like “chestfeeding’’ instead of breastfeeding and “human or parent’s milk’’ instead of the phrase “mother’s milk’*
This is what appears to be coming out of the National University
Where did you see it being mentioned by Australian academics? All articles I have seen refer to the UK and the Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals are the ones enacting these changes.
All the same, most folks on here would probably realise that I'm pretty socially progressive and recognise that anyone who has their children's best interests at heart should be able to be a parent but the oversanitising of language is ridiculous.
George Carlin has a great bit on the softening of language.
Parent-Inclusive Language
ANU celebrates diversity among its student body, and that
diversity extends to student parents. While many students will
identify as “mothers” or “fathers”, using these terms alone to
describe parenthood excludes those who do not identify with
gender-binaries.
Dinour notes that “heterosexual and woman-focused lactation
language [. . .] can misgender, isolate, and harm transmasculine
parents and non-heteronormative families” (2019, p.524). It is
therefore recommended to use the terms “breast/chest feeding”
and “human/parent’s milk”, rather than “breastfeeding” and
“mother’s milk” to describe lactation. When discussing childbirth,
use the terms “gestational” or “birthing” parent rather than
“mother”, and the terms “nongestational” or “nonbirthing” parent
rather than “father” (Dinour 2019, p.527).
This non-gendered language is particularly important in clinical or
abstract academic discussions of childbirth and parenthood,
both to recognise the identities of students in the class, and to
model inclusive behaviour for students entering clinical practice.
When working with student parents, defer to non-gendered
language until the student volunteers their preferred nomenclature
Taken from the ANU Gender Institute Handbook. I know that's what people study when they go to this particular institute, just interesting food for thought