Saturday, November 3, 2007

UnAmerican

In the lunch room yesterday one of my colleagues corrected herself after using the word "Americans" to refer to well, some Americans. She then changed it to North American. There is something that borders (pardon the pun) on silliness about this whole thing.

First of all, the idea that using American is somehow inaccurate or elitist just plain ignores the facts. I am a citizen of the United States of America. No other country uses America in its official name that I am aware of. It is not Canada of America, Brazil of America or Mexico of America. Latin America is not a country.

Second, her correction was no correction at all. If citizens of the US were to start calling themselves North Americans, the Canadians could then object.

Third, do the people in Mexico really want to think of themselves as Americans when the Iranians or Saudis pile into their streets chanting "Death to America" or the Europeans march with their signs condemning those awful "Americans"? I think not.

Fourth, it is too late. If somebody wanted to start complaining about this they should have started hundreds of years ago.

Fifth, it is strange to see Americans self-flagellating over this when they rarely offer a reasonable alternative. USAer? United Stateser? USEse?

Sixth, if other Latin American countries want to use American, let them have at it. When I use "American" it is not done with any sort of exclusivity in attitude. I do mean citizens of the USA. But if others want to use it, who is going to stop them?

Seventh, This has been tried numerous times before and it has failed every time.

1 comment:

Christopher said...

So is "American" unamerican?

I was taught in high school that the Spanish call us "los estados unidenses". I googled up the phrase and found that some Spanish-speaking persons are indeed calling us that or los estadounidenses -- in effect, "United Statesers." It doesn't work smoothly in English.

But your point stands. "American" is not only what we typically call ourselves, but what many in the world call us.

Without a good reason and a reasonable alternative, our inventing a new term would be merely quixotic.