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"Hunt you down"

Started by geheimrat, November 23, 2019, 01:44:36 PM

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Thursday's_Child

Quote from: geheimrat on November 24, 2019, 12:51:33 PM
Quote from: Caracal on November 24, 2019, 12:26:01 PM
Anybody who would complain about that is just looking for things to be upset about and is, almost certainly, a huge pain in the ass in a variety of other ways.

The faculty member who complained has been teaching here for less than a semester and the faculty member that they complained about was on their hiring committee.

No good deed goes unpunished?

Biblioeclectica

Let me provide an alternative perspective. Yes, this person may come across as overly sensitive. However, there are people who have good reasons to not be comfortable with this phrasing.

Some have already mentioned the mass shooting angle. Another is stalking, which is a much more likely trigger. A former colleague of mine who has been the victim of stalking multiple times was uneasy when a colleague said something similar to them.

It doesn't hurt to be mindful of how we phrase things.

Juvenal

Perhaps if the phrase had been, "Hunt you down like a dog," there might been a tad more grounds for unease.  But even so...

Cranky septuagenarian

writingprof

Quote from: Biblioeclectica on November 25, 2019, 08:04:53 AM
Some have already mentioned the mass shooting angle. Another is stalking, which is a much more likely trigger.

Right, but "triggering" is just a rhetorical trope to help progressives police speech. Let's not pretend it's a real phenomenon. The person who made this complaint is either crazy or laying the groundwork for some career-enhancing "victim"hood. My guess is the latter. OP, tread carefully.

mahagonny

Quote from: writingprof on November 25, 2019, 10:39:30 AM
Quote from: Biblioeclectica on November 25, 2019, 08:04:53 AM
Some have already mentioned the mass shooting angle. Another is stalking, which is a much more likely trigger.

Right, but "triggering" is just a rhetorical trope to help progressives police speech. Let's not pretend it's a real phenomenon. The person who made this complaint is either crazy or laying the groundwork for some career-enhancing "victim"hood. My guess is the latter. OP, tread carefully.

So your answer is 'yes' to both:

QuoteIs this a phrase that should be avoided, or is the faculty member who complained being overly sensitive?

marshwiggle

Quote from: Juvenal on November 25, 2019, 08:38:58 AM
Perhaps if the phrase had been, "Hunt you down like a dog," there might been a tad more grounds for unease.  But even so...


Given that the message was

  • sent to a bunch of colleagues
  • specifically related to getting grades for a course
unless a person had serious PTSD* it shouldn't be a problem.

(If Katniss Everdeen is a colleague, then she would probably qualify.)
It takes so little to be above average.

mamselle

Quote from: writingprof on November 25, 2019, 10:39:30 AM
Quote from: Biblioeclectica on November 25, 2019, 08:04:53 AM
Some have already mentioned the mass shooting angle. Another is stalking, which is a much more likely trigger.

Right, but "triggering" is just a rhetorical trope to help progressives police speech. Let's not pretend it's a real phenomenon. The person who made this complaint is either crazy or laying the groundwork for some career-enhancing "victim"hood. My guess is the latter. OP, tread carefully.

Excuse me.

I left my abusive spouse in 1980.

I still startle when someone bangs loudly on my front door, or comes up behind me and starts talking loudly.

Some responses never go away.

Please consider that your privileged experience which did not apparently include any of these things does not define everyone's experience and please stop trying to mansplain it away.

It's real, it's not being made up, and yes, if someone said a phrase like that to me, I might indeed have an involuntary, anxious reaction.

Get woke.

M.
Forsake the foolish, and live; and go in the way of understanding.

Reprove not a scorner, lest they hate thee: rebuke the wise, and they will love thee.

Give instruction to the wise, and they will be yet wiser: teach the just, and they will increase in learning.

Hegemony

I think insisting on one's right to use a phrase like this is beside the point.  Sure, you have a right to use it.  But it is not unreasonable that it calls to mind things that are a bit too close to home for those of us on college campuses.  So, maybe don't use the phrase on college campuses.  That's all there is to it.

clean

I believe that my Southern upbringing would require the "Bless your heart" first response.

My former department chair (of my pre PhD job) would have replied to the compliant with his pat response, "I bet you'd bitch if I hung you with a new rope." 

These days, that would generate secondary complaints about threats of lynching. 

So I end by quoting Rodney King, "Cant we all just get along?"
"The Emperor is not as forgiving as I am"  Darth Vader

Aster

I suppose that the common everyday phrase "put a gun to my/your head" is also not going to go over well in today's America.

Or really any phrase that has "gun" or "shoot" in it.

I look forward to see what's placed into our next sensitivity training workshop. Our last one was mostly Title IX related, although I dimly recall something about blackface being inserted also.

It makes sense that the next workshop would cover the trigger words related to gun-violence and/or domestic terrorism. This is something that today's students very much talk about, may have directly or indirectly experienced, and left a permanent emotional impression on. We had a mass shooting near us recently and lots of students know people who were there. I very nearly almost attacked somebody with a piece of furniture during a lockdown a few years back. It looked like he had a gun and the police sweep teams weren't yet to our side of the campus.

Social media seems to be accelerating the pace of sensitivity training modules. I'm glad that we're providing steady employment to the people that make training videos.

Kron3007

This is definitely being over sensitive and only feeds into the university stereotype.  PC principal would not approve...

Hunting can mean many things, we have treasure hunts, scavenger hunts, etc.  If someone saying they are going to hunt you down for grades offends you, you should seek counseling because you will not be able to function in the world.  If I had a colleague complain about this, I would do everything I could to avoid working closely with them as this is only the tip of the iceburg (sorry if this metaphor is insensitive to the very real climate change issue).

What about defending a thesis?  Would that not be even worse since it implies you are being attacked? 

     

marshwiggle

Quote from: Kron3007 on November 26, 2019, 06:33:49 AM
This is definitely being over sensitive and only feeds into the university stereotype.  PC principal would not approve...


In the perfect PC world, everyone will sound like Spock or Data. Language devoid of any metaphor, simile, or colloquialisms will be acceptable to all.

"A rosa by any other nomenclature would be potentially confusing or harmful."
It takes so little to be above average.

mahagonny

Quote from: Kron3007 on November 26, 2019, 06:33:49 AM
This is definitely being over sensitive and only feeds into the university stereotype.  PC principal would not approve...

Hunting can mean many things, we have treasure hunts, scavenger hunts, etc.  If someone saying they are going to hunt you down for grades offends you, you should seek counseling because you will not be able to function in the world.  If I had a colleague complain about this, I would do everything I could to avoid working closely with them as this is only the tip of the iceburg (sorry if this metaphor is insensitive to the very real climate change issue).

What about defending a thesis?  Would that not be even worse since it implies you are being attacked? 

     

No, that's valid language.

FishProf

I was attacked in my thesis defense.  That was the point.
I'd rather have questions I can't answer, than answers I can't question.

dr_codex

back to the books.