Sweden adopts ‘ hen’ as neutral pronoun
In the Egalia, a preschool in Stockholm, there are no male or female students. Instead, all children are referred to as “hen” — a gender- neutral pronoun that has become so established in Sweden that it will be recognized next month in the newest edition of the country’s official dictionary.
The Swedish Academy’s SAOL dictionary, which is updated every 10 years and will be republished April 15, will feature “hen” as an alternative to the male pronoun “han” and the female “hon.” The revised edition will also include thousands of other new words.
According to linguistic expert Sofia Malmgård, the gender- neutral term can be used in two ways. “First, if the gender is unknown or not relevant ( as in: “If anyone needs to smoke, ‘ hen’ may do so outside”). Second, it can be used as a pronoun for inter- gender people ( as in: “Kim is neither boy nor girl; ‘ hen’ is intergender”),” she explained.
To many Swedes, the decision of the Swedish Academy reflects how quickly their society has embraced gender- neutral language. “Over the last few years, the word ‘ hen’ has more and more found its way into the Swedish language,” Malmgård told Washington Post.
Five years ago, barely anyone in Sweden was aware of the word. The decision to now include “hen” in the authoritative SAOL dictionary is expected to facilitate an even more frequent use of it in everyday conversations. Set up in 1785, the academy was established with the aim to adapt the Swedish languages to changing cultural and societal influences.
According to experts, the “hen” revolution in Sweden has two primary origins: LGBT groups have promoted the pronoun as a way to raise awareness for their cause.
However, support for the idea has also come from a more unexpected side: Nurseries, kindergartens and preschools such as Egalia increasingly argue that the pronoun’s usage allows children to grow up without feeling the impact of gender biases.
“The public debate over the pronoun actually only started after the publication of the country’s first gender- neutral children’s book,” Lann Hornscheidt, a professor of Scandinavian languages and gender studies at Berlin’s Humboldt University, explained.
Gender- neutral education in Sweden goes far beyond linguistics. As the BBC already observed in 2011, toys and games in some nurseries are placed deliberately next to each other, in the hope that children will feel free to choose.
To Hornscheidt, the popularity of “hen” has not come as a surprise. “The introduction of a pronoun which challenges binary gender norms has been an important step, following a more thorough debate over the construction of gender within the last 10 years,” he said.