Tatiana Mac 363867be6d
Add definition for tone-deaf (#112)
*  Added Asian terms and subterms, Orientalism

*  Add misia, update fatphobia

*  Add tone-deaf

* 🚩 Changed flag to medical appropriation

* 🐛 Fixed indentation issue, broke build
2020-05-04 17:54:13 -07:00

1.9 KiB

title slug flag defined speech alt_words reading
tone-deaf tone-deaf
text level
Medical appropriation avoid
true adjective
badly drawn
in poor taste
insensitive
negligent
not thought through
unaware
poorly-conceived
text href
Less well-known ableist language https://thisisforyoucarrie.blog/2018/01/07/less-well-known-ableist-language/
text href
Quora: Is tone-deaf ableist? https://www.quora.com/Is-the-term-tone-deaf-ableist?share=1

amusia, a neurological disorder that can be congenital (from birth) or acquired (due to comorbidity or injury) that results in the inability to differentiate speech, loss of ability to sing or produce pitch, or other disassociations with music (like rhythm); colloquially, when something is insensitive or poorly thought through.

Appropriate Usage

Referring the medical condition (amusia) as described above

Inappropriate Usage

As a literary metaphor for insensitive or negligent

Issues

Connoting negligence with a medical disorder implies that actions we can control (bad choices) are the same as actions that cannot necessarily be controlled (deafness). It reinforces the discriminatory idea that disability is bad.

Impact

Using the word tone-deaf reinforces the idea that Deaf and/or non-speaking/non-verbal people are somehow less than and that disability is bad (see Ableism).

By using ableist language, we are perpetuating violence against people who experience mental or psychological disabilities. Using this language perpetuates those systems and language of harm, regardless of our intent.

Usage Tip

Be mindful if you're referring to the medical condition or using it as a literary metaphor. If the latter, substitute by being more specific. Typically we can find an alternate definition by simply reflecting on what emotion we're really feeling.