PropertyValue
?:author
?:datePublished
  • 2020-06-17 (xsd:date)
?:headline
  • Did Merriam-Webster Update Its Definition of 'Racism' To Say Only White People Are Racist? (en)
?:inLanguage
?:itemReviewed
?:mentions
?:reviewBody
  • As the police-custody death in the spring of 2020 of a Black man named George Floyd sparked a national reckoning over police brutality, the American dictionary Merriam-Webster also reconsidered its definition of racism. The company decided to revise the term after Kennedy Mitchum, a Black college student in Iowa, emailed editors in late May, urging a change. While the dictionary editors were still revising the wording in June and had not yet posted it, Snopes readers asked us about claims that the new definition would show only white people are racist (see example tweet below). We reached out to Peter Sokolowski, editor at large at Merriam-Webster, who said the assertion is entirely untrue. The assertion likely originated from Mitchum’s recommendation that the editors at Merriam-Webster include language about systemic racism. The dictionary entry for racism currently has three definitions, the first two of which already call attention to individual belief and systemic biases: FrontPage Magazine, a far-right publication, argued that the new definition’s emphasis on systemic racism would ignore the racism of Black people like activist Louis Farrakhan (the Southern Poverty Law Center has described Farrakhan’s rhetoric as racist). The magazine said: But their reporting failed to mention that Merriam-Webster was not planning to eliminate or replace the first definition, which focuses on individual racism. Sokolowski told Snopes that both definitions of racism — individual beliefs and the structural or institutional consequences of those individual beliefs — are already in the dictionary. They planned to simply clarify and contemporize the wording in the second definition. The following example illustrates the distinctions between the notion of individual versus systemic racism in the dictionary entry. Civil rights activists Stokely Carmichael and Charles V. Hamilton explained the difference in their 1967 book Black Power: The Politics of Liberation: Mitchum found this distinction lacking in conversations with white people who cited the first definition of the Merriam-Webster entry to deny their individual role in perpetuating racism but ignored the second. She emailed editors at Merriam-Webster in late May, arguing that the dictionary definition should be updated to reflect micro-aggressions and systemic racism. The editors agreed that the entry, which had not been changed in decades, needed a revision. They planned to expand the second definition of the entry, and sharpen its language to include explicit and implicit biases that contribute to racial discrimination. The role of systemic or institutional bias would be made clearer using examples like apartheid in South Africa. Sokolowski told Snopes that editors revise definitions based on usage: Finally, he argued that a dictionary could not capture everything about a word: Ultimately, Merriam-Webster was not planning to remove the definition of individual racism or add too much new information. Editors were simply expanding the second definition of their entry to make it clearer and in line with modern usage. We thus label the claim that the revision was being made to show only white people are racist as False. (en)
?:reviewRating
rdf:type
?:url