▲ | kulahan a day ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Your comment doesn’t really support its own premise well - you just say that we used to stereotype people and point out what some of those stereotypes were, but not why they’re radically incorrect. You sorta just pointed out that they exist. I’m not of one opinion or the other, I just don’t see why it’s self evident that certain groups of people wouldn’t walk a certain way. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | markburns a day ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
I had a realisation recently that we’re pretty comfortable with regional dialect borders being an entrenched and normal thing that reach back in history a thousand years or more and that something as specific as how we move our mouths and tongues is strongly correlated geographically. But we don’t often pay attention to other types of physical and behavioural culture being as geographically entrenched as they sometimes seem to be. Accents hold some special place in being so recognisable but I think there’s no obvious reason we wouldn’t have many other layers of physical culture like this. The signal is a bit harder to pick up but I’m sure it’s there. I’m not trying to make any particular point for or against damaging stereotypes here. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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