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In reply to the discussion: 'Françaises, Français': Why the French language need not be so sexist [View all]treestar
(82,383 posts)53. It's coming though!
There was a period piece from Regency England with black people playing some characters, upper class aristocrats like Dukes. People got called racists if they didn't like any aspect of the production. Some millennial even did a video saying if you called out any inaccuracy in the costumes, you were "gatekeeping" that is, trying to keep black people out of the fandom.
So I'm sure woman who wants to play MacBeth will show up and somebody will do a production that way. And it will be sexist to not like every aspect of it!
Also look for a known trans actor to play a person who is not trans but just the sex they chose. Has that ever happened? It would blow right wing minds if they didn't realize it.
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'Françaises, Français': Why the French language need not be so sexist [View all]
Klaralven
Feb 2021
OP
It's strange to see the somewhat new practice of using "they" and "them" as singular.
JustABozoOnThisBus
Feb 2021
#19
To be pedantic (in keeping with many of the replies to this OP!), singular they/them is not new.
Emrys
Feb 2021
#26
I bow to your pedanticism. Who'd'a thought to look to the 14th century?
JustABozoOnThisBus
Feb 2021
#31
It does, but in modern English, gender isn't embedded in the grammar as it is in French.
Emrys
Feb 2021
#12
Funny, I did not realize this until the last year or so, with debates over Brexit legislation.
tritsofme
Feb 2021
#41
Acting might be the one profession where having masculine and feminine nouns actually makes sense.
Midwestern Democrat
Feb 2021
#42
English is promiscuous. It accepts new words and grammars without much friction...
hunter
Feb 2021
#20