Kathryn Grayson Nanz b872dbe384
Add new front matter element: excerpt (#227)
* This commit adds the excerpt front matter element, to show an
abbreviated version of the definition in social previews. This
also includes the documentation updates to support this change.

* This commit adds @olvb's suggestion to use 'set' to define the
alert & preview combo, to avoid repetitive code

* This commit updates the preview text to only include the flag if
it's "avoid" – if the flag is "warning" or there is no flag, it
will not appear at the beginning of the preview text.

Co-authored-by: Kathryn Grayson Nanz <kathryn@Kathryns-MacBook-Air.local>
Co-authored-by: Oscar <ovlb@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Kathryn <>
2020-08-24 19:41:45 +02:00

1.9 KiB

title slug speech defined excerpt sub_terms reading
-misia -misia noun true from Greek for hate or hatred
text full_title
Fat fatmisia
text full_title
Islam Islamomisia
text full_title
Trans transmisia
text href
Beatley Library Anti-Oppression Guide https://simmons.libguides.com/anti-oppression#s-lib-ctab-10174165-1
text href
Anti-Oppression: Anti-Fatmisia https://simmons.libguides.com/anti-oppression/anti-fatmisia

from Greek for hate or hatred

Use

-Misia can be appended to minoritised identifiers that are targeted for hate, such as fat (fatmisia), trans (transmisia), or Islam (Islamomisia).

Issues

-Phobia is Greek for 'fear of'.

When used as a suffix in the context of Islamophobia, transphobia, or fatphobia, it is implied that the individual or group has a fear of individuals and communities who identify in those ways. Rather than a direct translation, however, the implication and subtext of these terms is one of prejudice and discrimination. Using the term phobia falsely masks hate as fear.

Additionally, people with anxiety disorders and mental illness can also experience phobias, so conflating prejudice and discrimination (attitudes and behaviours that can be changed) with medical conditions that cannot be changed additionally harms people who experience phobias from their anxiety disorders.

As such, using the term phobia removes the responsibility from those who exhibit prejudice and discrimination as it implies it is outside of their control.

Impact

Hateful actions of prejudice and discrimination are unfairly conflated with mental illness. It can create a false parallel where one could imply that actual phobias are something that can be controlled, which harms people who experience actual phobias.

Meanwhile, people exhibiting prejudice and discrimination are given excuses for their bigoted behaviour and not held accountable for their actions.

Preferable To

-phobia