Rii
Rear Admiral
So, English fails in not having a gender-neutral pronoun. "They" can be pressed into service in many cases, and most sentences can be rebuilt around "one" if one doesn't mind sounding like one has a stick up one's ass, but neither are perfect solutions and "he" continues to make its presence felt in cases where its referent could be either male or female.
I notice - or at least I think I notice, I haven't exactly run any controlled tests - that when I'm reading a text that uses "she" as the generic pronoun, it tends to slow me down, at least on the first instance. I think what's happening is that I'm aware that "he" is the "standard" choice, so when I encounter "she" a part of my mind asks why and considers possible explanations: gender of the author, context, etc.
What I'm not sure of, though, is to what extent my own gender affects this. Is the reason I'm able to process "he" faster than "she" purely a product of conditioning, or does the fact that I'm male have something to do with it as well?
Hence, I'm curious about how women deal with "he".
It's entirely possible that I'm simply imagining this discrepency, as on more than a few occasions after encountering the generic "he" I've thought "man, English sucks", which probably takes up as much processing time as the negotiation of "she" does.
I notice - or at least I think I notice, I haven't exactly run any controlled tests - that when I'm reading a text that uses "she" as the generic pronoun, it tends to slow me down, at least on the first instance. I think what's happening is that I'm aware that "he" is the "standard" choice, so when I encounter "she" a part of my mind asks why and considers possible explanations: gender of the author, context, etc.
What I'm not sure of, though, is to what extent my own gender affects this. Is the reason I'm able to process "he" faster than "she" purely a product of conditioning, or does the fact that I'm male have something to do with it as well?
Hence, I'm curious about how women deal with "he".
It's entirely possible that I'm simply imagining this discrepency, as on more than a few occasions after encountering the generic "he" I've thought "man, English sucks", which probably takes up as much processing time as the negotiation of "she" does.
