Otway Journal - Coming Back to Earth

Page 72

72

Another word for ‘politically correct’ by Renée Otmar

Remember New Year’s Eve, 1999? Readers who are old enough to recall how they celebrated the turning of the century may also recall a quietly underlying sense of panic as we watched our clocks ticking closer to midnight. The millennium bug, or Y2K, as we called it, was a 1960s-era computer programming shortcut whose chickens were about to come home to roost. There were dire warnings about what would occur around the world when computer programs using two-digit years (98, 99 instead of 1998, 1999) could not distinguish between the years 2000 and 1900. Some commentators warned about impending mass plane crashes, while others predicted malfunctioning power stations that would plunge civilisation as we knew it back into the Stone Age. In the United Kingdom, incorrect assessments for Down Syndrome were sent to 154 pregnant women, resulting in two abortions due to miscalculation of the mothers’ age. These were perhaps the most serious consequences at the individual level. Other documented problems were relatively minor – for example, taxi meters in Singapore stopped working and the machines validating bus tickets failed in two Australian states. But, for the most part, the sky did not fall in. Twenty years later, and our reliance on electronic and computing technologies has increased in ways we could not have anticipated back then. Australians typically own several ‘smart’ devices, including phones, tablets, laptop and desktop computers, wearable devices, cars and

household appliances, to name just a few. We depend on these devices in emergency situations and to conduct our work and pay our bills; for entertainment and to communicate with each other across a range of platforms. Chief among the latter is social media. Interestingly, while many people extoll the virtues of social media – it helps us keep in touch easily with friends and family, locally and in far-flung places; it can provide opportunities to find love or companionship, and so on – but perhaps as many people are concerned about its dangers. Among these is cyber bullying, which in a nutshell is vile, anti-social behaviour conducted online. Many people use social media to express their creativity, or to share their views or support a particular issue, including social and political causes. It’s almost impossible to comprehend the sheer range of topics and grievances people find necessary to air on online, but one that stands out for me is ‘political correctness’. Now, political correctness is not a new concept by any means. In fact, it dates back to 1934, when The New York Times revealed that Nazi Germany was only approving applications for reporting permits from ‘pure “Aryans” whose opinions are ‘politically correct’. In other words, even international journalists had to respect and support that regime’s doctrines. Criticise Hitler or the party and you would lose your permit – or worse. In Australia, conservative politicians and commentors, as well as many with extremist leanings, often complain about ‘political correctness gone mad’. They object to changes in the way we address and depict people so that these reflect contemporary norms, such as referring to people by their nominated cultural, gender or other identity. In my work as an editor, I am often asked to assess the suitability of a manuscript for its intended audience. If the book is for young children, part of my job is to ensure that the words, sentences, images and concepts are not too complicated for them to comprehend while at the


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Otway Journal - Coming Back to Earth

1min
page 25

Water & Light: A Strange Masquerade

1min
pages 100-101

Otway Journal - Coming Back to Earth

1min
pages 1, 3

Otway Journal - Coming Back to Earth

1min
pages 22-23

Tjanimaku Tjukurpa: how one young man came good

2min
page 134

Active Hope

0
page 135

Afterword

1min
pages 136-138

Books to Challenge, Inspire, Nourish and Soothe

14min
pages 128-133

44th Apollo Bay Art Show

2min
pages 126-127

The Wolves of Lenteme

6min
pages 124-125

Entering the Bardo

7min
pages 122-123

What Happens Next?

1min
page 118

Shaping a Brave New World

6min
pages 120-121

Five Ways to Create Self-Care During Self-Isolation

16min
pages 110-117

Renee Karacsay - Wild Women

1min
pages 108-109

In Silence

0
page 107

for the Mad Farmer - Thinking Peacefully

1min
page 106

Silvereye

0
page 105

Water & Light: A Strange Masquerade

4min
pages 100-104

In the Ground of Our Unknowing

16min
pages 90-95

Irma

2min
page 89

Spectres

0
page 96

Death Came Dancing In On A Stick

1min
pages 98-99

Phil Weymouth

1min
pages 87-88

Meet A Local: John Bartlett, Poet/Gardener

5min
pages 84-86

The Community that Connects Together Survives Together

3min
pages 78-79

Grassroots to Selfies-Paradise

4min
pages 75-77

Book Review

2min
page 74

Another word for ‘politically correct

4min
pages 72-73

She Just Is

2min
page 71

Portraits of a Pandemic

3min
pages 69-70

Seeing with new eyes

5min
pages 67-68

Eco

0
page 66

Kooparoona Niara - Mountains of the Spirits

6min
pages 60-62

Linear Artists: Vicki West

3min
pages 58-59

Meet Simon Rigg - Artist and Nature Lover

3min
pages 55-57

Summer On The Painkalac

19min
pages 46-50

Disgust: what is not discussed in Australian politics

25min
pages 38-43

In between places

5min
pages 52-54

Looking out over the fjord I count the years

1min
page 44

Cry Your Tears

1min
page 37

The age of Solastalgia

6min
pages 34-36

Studio Forrest

2min
pages 31-33

How I came to be not-yet-an-artist

4min
pages 18-21

Escape to Otway Fields

8min
pages 10-13

Rex

4min
page 14

Colac Otway Arts Trail 2020-2021

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page 24

Portal Postcard Project

3min
pages 16-17

A Little Blue Bird of Gratitude - Sign From the Universe

1min
page 15

Beauty in Truth The Botanical Art of Margaret Stone

6min
pages 26-28

Trina Ebling

6min
pages 6-9
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