I'm a fan of this historian, and this blog post tickled my brain. Hopefully you find it interesting.

  • Hexamerous [none/use name]
    ·
    2 months ago

    Her opinion is that she likes gossiping, she reveals that in the first paragraphs. She also seem to make no distinction between "good and bad" gossiping and the "social grooming" aspect of it us just assumed to be good.

    She seem to conflate "gossiping" with "talking" to people, witch is absurd to me. At least to me, "gossiping" have a very negative connotation and essentially means the "nasty talk" people engage in while sharing information that's none of their business, like others sex life. It's not "gossiping" when you're distributing serious information about sex-pests and such. Also, "social grooming" sends chills up my spine, it's just screams social exclusion and popular clique.

    Honestly the vibe I get from the author is that she wrote this in her own defense, she wants to talk body count and misfortune. Otherwise she would have gone more into the "free speech" aspect of disseminating socially necessary information that powerful people don't want to be shared. But again this is just people talking, not "gossiping" as I understand the word. The fact that she dosn't seem to understand the difference is a red flag.

    gossip is my own private soap opera

    This is a person I don't want at the table.

    check-please

    • NaevaTheRat@vegantheoryclub.org
      hexagon
      ·
      2 months ago

      I think she's using it in the same sense as the Oxford dictionary "conversation about other people and their private lives" which is certainly closer to how people around me use it. Like a normal greeting to my friends would be "what's the goss?" and they would tell me how their lives are going.

      Specifically my experience is gossip is when femme presenting people discuss people. Before I transitioned doing the same things in a masculine context would be "shooting the shit" or "having a yarn". Potentially some local regional variation.

      Certainly calling someone a gossip has extremely negative connotations here, more in line with your perception. A gossip would be a femme presenting person (always) who has a reputation for spreading unkind information, often fictional, about people.

      Social grooming is the name of a behaviour among apes: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_grooming e.g. my wife adjusting my hair is social grooming. It's just an academic term.