Brit Pick Question

Oct 17, 2011 13:19

OK, so, for those of you who don't know, I teach Freshman world geography.  My students are roughly 14 or 15 years old ( Read more... )

help, real life, school crap

Leave a comment

Comments 16

alyse October 17 2011, 18:27:12 UTC
OBVIOUSLY if a black person lives in the UK, they are African

No. They're African if they happen to have been born in Africa, in which case they're usually referred to as Nigerian, Botswanan etc rather than as a generic 'African' (or at least, they are by people who aren't being offensive ETA: in the UK, I mean, not that you were being :)).

If they were born in the UK and have UK citizenship, they're British (and sometimes British and Black, but we don't differentiate in the same way that the US does).

A considerable proportion of Black British families originally immigrated from the Caribbean, so you do hear references to Afro-Caribbean culture, but as far as I know, the preferred term used by the Black community is still British and Black.

Reply

tay_21 October 17 2011, 20:10:02 UTC
Oops, sorry. The almost fight distracted me. THat should have read they 'aren't African American.' My bad.

The differentiation in the US drives me nuts. I keep trying to explain to my classes that the rest of the world is not like that. That's why I needed this information. So, thanks.

Edit: That whole sentence is totally convoluted actually and it should have said they are black, but not African American. Sorry for the confusion.

Reply

alyse October 17 2011, 20:27:59 UTC
S'ok. I just get a bit 'sigh' when people in the US assume that their terminology and outlook are universal ::g::

Reply

tay_21 October 17 2011, 20:30:53 UTC
Yeah I get that, and I totally don't. This is what I've been TRYING to explain to my students. (And failing apparently) *headdesk*

Reply


prehistoriccat October 17 2011, 19:13:46 UTC
It's actually OK in the UK to refer to the actual colour of their skins... whites, blacks, half-cast... It is also the same in South Africa, to call someone "coloured" is actually considered an insult by the black community, they are proud to be called black. Coloured refers to those of mixed race.

I remember being in Canada (Toronto) a few years back, and getting a strange look for asking for a white coffee as if it was insult; apparently I should have asked for a coffee with milk. I don't quite get the whole "political correctness" thing you have over in North America where you can't just simply say someone is White or Black

Reply

tay_21 October 17 2011, 20:21:53 UTC
That's what I thought, but I wanted to know for certain. Black British or just British, right. In general ( ... )

Reply


pottsfanatic October 17 2011, 20:16:40 UTC
I agree with prehistoriccat and Alyse, Black is the accepted term. The US is over sensitive when it comes to these sorts of things. I really like to freak people out and say human. :)

Reply

tay_21 October 17 2011, 20:23:04 UTC
HA!!!!! Awesome. I'll have to remember that. LOL! Human. :-D Its perfect. And I completely agree, we're WAAAAAAAAY to sensitive. Political correctness has totally run amok here. *headdesk* It drives me nuts.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up