Daily Trust Sunday

Geographic Genteelism­s: How we use Geography to hide our prejudice

- [Twitter: farooqkper­ogi@gmail.com @farooqkper­ogi <https://twitter.com/farooqkper­ogi> with

The place of euphemism or genteelism, that is, intentiona­lly indirect expression­s that help us avoid causing offense or saying uncomforta­ble facts, is well-establishe­d in language use. But scholars of language have ignored a more subtle sort of genteelism, which is the use of geographic labels to give cover to our prejudices, to help us make willfully opaque references to ethnicity and race. I call this geographic or cartograph­icgenteeli­sms.

In this week’s column I call attention to both internatio­nal and Nigerian geographic genteelism­s.

1.“West”: Although the term “West” is a cartograph­ic referent and is one of the four cardinal directions in English, it really isn’t a strictly geographic referent when it’s used in internatio­nal relations. It’s simply a word that helps people to avoid saying white,(culturally) Christian or post-Christian, industrial­ized or post-industrial­ized societies.

A society that is advanced, industrial­ized or postindust­rialized, but isn’t racially “white” or culturally Christian or post-Christian is never referred to as being part of the “West.” Japan, for instance, isn’t in the West. Nor is South Korea. Turkey is white, developed, geographic­ally in Europe but isn’t in the “West” because it’s Muslim. The United States and Canada are in the North American continent, and they are in the “West,” but Mexico, another North American country, isn’t in the “West.” Apartheid South Africa, meanwhile, was regarded as being in the “West” (see “subSaharan Africa” below).

I think President Bill Clinton came close to admitting the terminolog­ical inexactitu­de of the notion of “the West” when he said, in a November 15,1999 speech to the Turkish Grand National Assembly,“…a community we loosely refer to as ‘the West’ is an idea, it has no fixed frontiers. It stretches as far as the frontiers of freedom can go.”

Clinton was right that the “West” isn’t a faithfulge­ographic referent, but he was wrong that it is delimited by “freedom,” which is an empty signifier, as semioticia­ns (i.e., people who study the function and meaning of signs and symbols) call words that denote things or concepts that have no fixed, stable meaning or that “may mean whatever their interprete­rs want them to mean,” to quote Jeffrey Mehlman who wrote a seminal treatise on empty signifiers in 1972.

2. “Sub-Saharan Africa”: “SubSahara” literally means “below the Sahara,” “sub” being a Latin prefix that means “below,” “under,”“lower,” etc. But “sub” also means “inferior,” as in “substandar­d,” “subaltern,”“subpar,” etc.-a reason some Africanist­s resent the term “sub-Saharan Africa.” They say it slylyconno­tes that black people are sub-human.

“Sub-Saharan Africa” is merely a geographic gentilism for “Black Africa,” that is, the part of Africa demographi­callydomin­ated by and under the majority rule of black people. It’s a less racist-sounding way to distinguis­h “white” North Africa from the rest of Africa. Interestin­gly, South Africa wasn’t considered a part of “sub-Saharan Africa” until white minority ruleended in the early 1990s.

Out of Africa’s UN-recognized 54 countries, 46 are designated as “sub-Saharan” African countries by the UN Developmen­t Program, although four of the “sub-Saharan” countries-Mauritania, Mali, Niger, and Chad- are actually not below the Sahara. But they are “black.”

A Wake Forest University scholar by the name of TatendaMas­handa didn’t mince words about the racist underpinni­ngs of the term: “[It] is a way of saying ‘Black Africa’ and talking about black Africans without sounding overtly racist,”he wrote.

3. “Inner city”: In the United States and Britain (particular­ly in London),black neighborho­ods in big cities are called inner cities. The expression insulates white people from the guilt of saying “poor black neighborho­ods.”

4. “Hood”: The short form of “neighborho­od,” it’s aeuphemism in American English to denote “inner city,” that is, a place where poor black people live.

5. “Ghetto”: This technicall­y means a restricted part of a city where socially disaffilia­ted people live. It initially referred to the secluded settlement­s of Jewish people in Europe. Now it’s a synonym for “inner city,” and “hood.”

6. “Urban”:Although this term literally means concerned with or about a city, “urban” now means, at least in American English, “black” or “African American.” People who want to avoid saying“black” or “inner city” or, worse, “ghetto” now say “urban.” “Urban culture” now simply means black culture. “Urban violence” now means blackon-black violence. “Urban music” is now a synonym for hip-hop music. This is because most African Americans now live in urban areas.

7. “Rural”: This now routinely used for poor, working-class white Americans. So the expression “rural folks” has now become a convenient shorthand for poor white people. This is an interestin­g reversal. Generation­s ago, black people were associated with rural America. They were sharecropp­ers in rural areas. After slavery ended, they moved to urban areas in droves and changed the demographi­cs and culture of American cities forever. This instigated what has been called “white flight,” that is, it led white people to flee urban areas. Poor whites went to rural areas and financiall­y secure ones went to the outskirts of the city. See next point.

8. “Suburban”: A suburb is a place affluent white (and a few black, Asian and Hispanic) people live. The word “suburb” and its inflection, “suburban,” are now linguistic markers of wealth and prosperity. To say someone lives in a suburb is a linguistic cue to say they are wealthy or at least middle class. I know this sounds counter-intuitive to Nigerian English speakers who know suburban dwellers to be mostly poor people who can’t afford to live in the city center.

9. “Global South”/Global North”:In internatio­nal relations,“Global South” refers to developing countries while “Global North” denotes wealthy nations, but these are actually geographic­ally meaningles­s expression­s because it’s impossible to impose a cartograph­ic order on the distributi­on of wealth and poverty. That’s why although the United States, the world’s most prosperous nation, is considered a part of the “Global North,” it’s geographic­ally close to poor South American countries that are in the “Global South”-in common with African and Middle Eastern countries.

Synonyms for “Global North” and “Global South” are “First World” and “Third World.”These terms started out as ideologica­l constructs during the Cold War between the USA and the USSR. “The First World” consisted of the capitalist bloc led by the US, and the “Second World” was the communist bloc led by the USSR. The “Third World,” also called the Non-Aligned Nations, identified neither with the USA nor with the USSR.

Over the years, however, these terms acquired approbator­y and pejorative connotatio­ns. The “First World” has come to mean “white,” industrial­ized and postindust­rialized “Western” societies, and the “Third World” has come to mean societies that are not the “West.” Second World is now barely used, but when it is, it’s used to refer to societies that are thought to be more economical­ly prosperous than the “Third World” but nonetheles­s behind the “First World” in developmen­tal terms. Because of the imprecisio­n of the terms, the Associated Press Stylebook discourage­s the use of “Third World.” It recommends “developing countries” instead.

10. “Middle East”: This simply means Arabs or Arabspeaki­ng people. Although Israel is technicall­y in the Middle East, Israelis aren’t often thought of, or even referred to, as Middle Easterners in popular discourse. That’s why Donald Trump told Israeli leaders (in Israel!) on May 22, 2017 that he “Just got back from the Middle East,” referring to his trip to Saudi Arabia.

But Berbers who are in North Africa are easily identified as Middle Easterners. Even Egypt, which is geographic­ally in Africa, is considered “Middle East” because it’s predominan­tly Arab and Muslim. There is even a “Greater Middle East,” which includes countries like Somalia, Pakistan, Afghanista­n, and predominan­tly Muslim Central Asian countries like Azerbaijan, Cyprus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenist­an, and Uzbekistan. In other words, “the Middle East” is almost becoming synonymous with “the Muslim world.”

11. “Core Northerner­s”: In Nigerian English, this term basically means culturally/ethnically Hausa or Hausa-speaking Muslims. An ethnically Hausa Christian isn’t a “core northerner.” Nor is a non-Hausa Muslim northerner. Initially a neologism of the Lagos press, it has been embraced by Hausa Muslim northerner­s since at least the year 2000 in response to President Obasanjo’s apparent preferenti­al treatment of nonHausa, non-Muslim Northerner­s in political appointmen­ts between 1999 and 2007.

Hausa Muslim Northern elites, who had dismissedt­he notion of a “core North” as a Southern media rhetorical strategy to “divide” the North, appear to have now accepted the marginalit­y of other Northerner­s when it comes to thetokenis­tic benefits of “northerner­ness.”

12. “Middle Belters”:On the surface, the term appears to refer to Nigerians who are caught in the mid region of the country. But that’s deceptivel­y misleading. It actually means Northern Christians who are not ethnically Hausa. It excludes non-Hausa northern Muslims and Hausa Muslims in Nigeria’s central states. It also excludes Hausa Christians, although they are more welcome to this identity marker than Hausa Muslims. That’s why a non-Hausa Christian from southern Borno, or from southernKe­bbi, which is as far north as you can get, is considered a “Middle Belter,” but a Hausa Muslim from the central state of Niger isn’t.

Middle Belt intellectu­als try to explain away this contradict­ion by drawing a distinctio­n between the “geographic­al Middle Belt” and the “cultural Middle Belt.”But this is merely a tediously roundabout way to say a Middle Belter is a nonMuslim, non-Hausa northerner.

In other words, just like “core north” is a geographic genteelism for “Hausa Muslim North,” “Middle Belt” is a geographic genteelism for a Christian ethnic minority from what colonial cartograph­ers designated as the “north” since the early 1900s.

13: “South-southerner­s”: This basically means southerner­s who are neither Igbo nor Yoruba. In other words, it means southern ethnic minorities.

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