Talk:Yonsei: Difference between revisions
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''Yonsei'' should be accepted as the Wikipedia primary topic for sociological reasons. |
''Yonsei'' should be accepted as the Wikipedia primary topic for sociological reasons. |
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The trans-generational labelling is a distinctive feature of Japanese emigrant or ''[[Nikkei]]'' communities. This noteworthy phenomenon is found in a majority of national ''Nikkei'' communities in North and South America; but, curiously, it is not a feature of the way Japanese Britons view themselves. It is less marked in post-War Australia than in North and Latin America. |
The trans-generational labelling is a distinctive feature of Japanese emigrant or ''[[Nikkei]]'' communities. This noteworthy phenomenon is found in a majority of national ''Nikkei'' communities in North and South America; but, curiously, it is not a feature of the way Japanese Britons view themselves. It is less marked in post-War Australia than in North America and in Latin America. |
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In addition, the |
In addition, the official governmental intervention in cross-generational relationships and in the family structures of the ''Issei,'' ''Nisei,'' and ''Sansei'' has been studied as a unique sociological phenomenon which is distinct from other immigrant experiences. The expectation that ''Yonsei'' would be largely unaffected by these phenomenon has been affected by the effects of the extremely active and successful political and legal successes of their parents, the ''Samsei'' -- thus producing unanticipated consequences. |
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====Conclusion: ''Yonsei'' is demonstrably a "Primary topic"==== |
====Conclusion: ''Yonsei'' is demonstrably a "Primary topic"==== |
Revision as of 22:32, 21 November 2008
This template must be substituted. Replace {{Requested move ...}} with {{subst:Requested move ...}}. Discussion moved to main article Yonsei (Occidentalist (talk) 11:59, 19 November 2008 (UTC)).
Requested move
Yonsei (disambiguation) → Yonsei — To revert undiscussed page move. As there is no agreement on what is the primary topic (see Talk:Yonsei), the disambiguation page should be located at the plain title without "(disambiguation)" per WP:DABNAME. — Kusunose 16:22, 19 November 2008 (UTC)
Survey
- Feel free to state your position on the renaming proposal by beginning a new line in this section with
*'''Support'''
or*'''Oppose'''
, then sign your comment with~~~~
. Since polling is not a substitute for discussion, please explain your reasons, taking into account Wikipedia's naming conventions.
- Support as nominator. --Kusunose 16:23, 19 November 2008 (UTC)
- Support *sigh*, procedure over procedure. The primary topic of Yonsei has not been decided so far, so it would be better for Yonsei to remain as "dab" page.--Caspian blue 16:31, 19 November 2008 (UTC)
- Oppose. As an alternative, because the topics are so unrelated, I propose simple delete of the Yonsei (disambiguation) page.
- The whole matter has become ridiculously over blown and is part of Caspian blue's general MO on any topic relating to any Japanese-Korean relationship or editors.
- Yonsei, as a singular word, is the word and name for the fourth generation (not just of migrants). It is not used in the singular to refer to a hospital (which does not actually official use the word in its title), nor a university. (Occidentalist (talk) 18:03, 20 November 2008 (UTC)).
- Example of Yonsei without university being used to refer to the university: [1] "The new ETP partners are high level universities such as Science Po (Paris); the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS, University of London), Bocconi School of Management (Milan) and Yonsei (Seoul)..." Taemyr (talk) 19:51, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
- In that incident, the list of universities is prefaced by the word university and so from an editorial point of view, to repeat it 4 or 5 times would be redundant. Its not a good example, although I don't doubt faculty and alumni do call it "Yonsei".
- In that case, I think we should default to example set by Oxford] where the singular word is the main topic and even its University is relegated to a disambiguation page.
- I restate though, to even discuss this is to miss the point of this exercise on Caspian blue's behalf (of which I include all the messy page moves etc). It is a deliberate provocation, whether conscious or unconscious, and part of their Korea-Japan "issue". As such, it should be ignored and reads left to benefit from the excellent search engine provided. (--Occidentalist (talk) 07:10, 21 November 2008 (UTC)).
- Yes, it shows simply that there is cases where the University part of the name is dropped. That is all it takes for inclusion in the DAB.
- As for what topic is primary; it's not whether or not it is a singular word or not. Oxford as a singular word often refer to the university. What is important is if one meaning is far more common than all others. In the case of Oxford the city is deemed to be such a far more common meaning. A different outcome was found in the case of Cornell.
- We have heard a lot of accusations of bad faith. However, the motives of the editors are not germane in considering what the primary topic of Yonsei is. So far no argument have been given to substantiate the claim that the generation is a more common meaning, in contrast Caspian have shown that if we choose to go by google then the university should be chosen as the primary topic.diff Taemyr (talk) 08:35, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
OpposeSupport: I change my position in response to AndrewHowse's reasoning. As I understand it, AndrewHowse counsels that it's probably best to follow pre-established procedures which have been worked out in advance by earlier consensus; and in due course, more intractable issues might appear more amenable to resolution. With at least one significant element of the dispute set aside because of this step-by-step approach, a way to ameliorate further difficulties might present itself. --Tenmei (talk) 22:51, 19 November 2008 (UTC)
Extended content
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- Support No consensus appears likely for any page to be the primary topic. If at some future date some of the contenders are deleted, leaving only one potential primary topic, then we'll deal with it at that time. --AndrewHowse (talk) 22:22, 19 November 2008 (UTC)
Discussion
A priori, it seems to me that Taemyr's analysis of the disputed issues and contending points-of-view at Talk:Yonsei#Primary Topic is generally congruent with the comment posted above by AndrewHowse, e.g., "Which page that should be at Yonsei is governed by WP:PRIMARYTOPIC." This approach is appealing. I need more time to figure out how to articulate my misgivings or to dismiss them as unhelpful.
A crucial step forward seems potentially acceptable to all participants in the discussion threads -- that the disambiguation page will be renamed without objection as Yonsei (disambiguation), similar to Harvard (disambiguation) and Yale (disambiguation) ... which now reveals a distilled locus of dispute, i.e.,
- Whether a Japanese word will be permitted to be given prominence and precedence over a Korean word. In other words, the dispute becomes about whether Yonsei has to be a redirect to Yonsei University because it is more important than a Japanese emigrant group.
I think this formulation of the problem goes to what has always been Caspian blue's unspoken objectives.
I have misgivings about the concepts of "precedence" and "more important" in this context; and any sentence construction which incorporates these terms becomes a loaded question. --Tenmei (talk) 21:52, 19 November 2008 (UTC)
- Kusunose's proposal
- What Kusunose proposes is eminently reasonable, unremarkable, routine ... when viewed through the narrow focus of mere days; but in the broader panorama across months and years in which Wikipedia administrators have wrongly allowed articles to become mired in a too-long series of hapless battlefields with "dimensions of Korean and Japanese nationalism", a terse "no" is a more constructive and hopeful response. This is one of those odd moments in which "no" actually becomes a step towards creating something more workable.
- Kusunose's proposal
- In my view, all further moves need to stop while other crucial issues are thrashed out.
- ASIDE:Ultimately, I would expect to see Yonsei (disambiguation) as the ultimate outcome; therefore, I see no harm in leaving matters as they are.
A more profitable use of time would be invested in giving close scrutiny to one of the elements Caspian blue added to embellish that disambiguation page which opened the door to the Comedy of Errors as it has since played out:
Caspian blue's redirect appears to be a made-up term, a petty legerdemain, a bit of filler which is inconsistent with WP:V. See, e.g.,
- If this is demonstrably not a hoax, then I would be pleased to acknowledge it
; but, when Caspian blue refused to respond to my inquiries, and then eventually responded only in Korean, my misgivings were not minimized, mitigated, ameliorated.
- If this is demonstrably not a hoax, then I would be pleased to acknowledge it
It appears that Caspian blue, who is arguing (on behalf of others perhaps?) in support of the proposition that Yonsei University is an exemplar of WP:PRIMARYTOPIC, has over-reached. If it turns out that a contrived hoax was deemed necessary to strengthen a weak argument ..., then there is something wrong which can only be illuminated by examining this minor tempest-in-a-teapot for what it is or whatever it's supposed to be. The conventional tendency to extend all benefits of doubt to Caspian blue's point-of-view would not apply. and Caspian blue will have made a very persuasive argument that the alternative -- the Nikkei emigrants/immigrants are an exemplar of WP:PRIMARYTOPIC.--Tenmei (talk) 21:52, 19 November 2008 (UTC)
Caspian blue has provided the following source citations adequately address the reasonable questions I have asked ad nauseum without an answer before this:"Cho Byung-kuk: Lifelong Guardian Angel of Adoptees". The Chosun Ilbo. Oct.30,2008.{{cite news}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help)"`Stomach Cancer Recovery 17 Times Higher if Detected Early`". The Dong-a Ilbo. NOVEMBER 11, 2008.{{cite news}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help)
In response, you will note that I have stricken the words which presented a question which has now been answered. One sentence has not been stricken; and I repeat it now for redundant clarity: If this is demonstrably not a hoax, then I would be pleased to acknowledge it. --Tenmei (talk) 05:26, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
- The inclusion or not of Yonsei Severance Hospital on the dab page seems completely irrelevant with respect to what is the primary topic.
- It is not an issue about a Japanese word vs. a Korean word. The issue is about the English word. Caspian blue argues that google search results indicate that the university is a far more common referent for the term. I have not yet seen any counter arguments to this. Taemyr (talk) 05:19, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
- In my view, the last four sentences are crisply stated, clearly related, and arguably valid; but I haven't yet figured out how to use them as a platform from which to construct the a tentative step. --Tenmei (talk) 15:22, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
Comment. As an outsider to this discussion so far, it appears to me that "Yonsei" and "Yonsei University" are two separate topics, and therefore WP:PRIMARYTOPIC is not relevant. Unless Yonsei University is commonly referred to as just "Yonsei" (is it?) and could plausibly use that single word as the title for its article, I don't see a problem with using "Yonsei" for the article about Japanese emigrant descendents, with an appropriate hatnote to Yonsei (disambiguation) for other articles whose titles also include the word. Station1 (talk) 09:11, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
- I think usually when you have "something University" you will get frequent use of just the something to refer to the university. Consider the question "where did you study?". One would expect just "Yonsei" to be a plausible answer since the University part is implied. Taemyr (talk) 17:23, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
Primary Topic
The unwelcome, precipitous and untimely page move by Occadentalist caused a disruption of the talk page threads. In my view, the most important thread was succinctly summarized by Taemyr who wrote:
- Which page that should be at Yonsei is governed by WP:PRIMARYTOPIC. In short, if a meaning of Yonsei can be considered as being far more common than any other then that meaning should be selected as the primary topic.
- I have not seen any argument that the term Yonsei in English is more often used about fourth generation Japanese immigrants than it is about a Korean university or medical journal. In the absence of such arguments WP:PRIMARYTOPIC is fairly clear that no primary topic should be selected. -- Taemyr (talk) 18:13, 14 November 2008 (UTC) ...diff
- I do not yet understand "primary topic." Someone needs to explain it to me so that I can better participate in the discussion which has unfolded in this venue. Failing that, I may require answers to questions that are not as well understood as I would like. --Tenmei (talk) 22:19, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
Argument: Yonsei is arguably a "Primary topic"
It appears to me that Yonsei University and Yosei are two distinct and unrelated topics. It would appear that little or no confusion is caused by the fact that each topic exists simultaneously and in unrelated contexts. At best, I would have understood these two subjects as something of an "apples-and-oranges" array for which no common denominator is easily discernible -- nor would I have grasped intuitively that there was a pressing need for a "primary topic" to help distinguish between them. In other words, this controversy is deemed of interest only in with Wikipedia context. This "problem" does not arise on its own.
In my view, there is no need "to count the number of angels on the head of a pin" or to go through any other similarly extended contortions in order to resolve what is essentially a non-issue. This is resolved quite simply by returning to the status quo ante of November 6th in which there were two unrelated articles linked only by reciprocal hatnotes at the top of each page -- [Yonsei University]] and Yonsei are able to exist independently, side-by-side, with no need for controversy or competition.
Focus of dispute
I present a distilled locus of dispute, i.e.,
- Whether a Japanese word will be permitted to be given prominence and precedence over a Korean word. In other words, the dispute becomes about whether Yonsei has to be a redirect to Yonsei University because it is more important than a Japanese emigrant group.
I think this formulation of the problem goes to what has always been Caspian blue's unspoken objectives. An cursory review Caspian blue's disputes at WP:AN/I and edits which have been less prominently developed lends credence to this unwelcome proposition. Wishing that this were not so does little to make it diminish as an insoluble dilemma.
Taemyr posits a more diplomatic proposition: "It is not an issue about a Japanese word vs. a Korean word. The issue is about the English word."
Undoubtedly Taemyr describes an hortatory ideal, but Caspian blue's edit history across an array of articles does not provide support for the notion that this is what the prime mover of this dispute believes or seeks to achieve.
Expressed in different words, the quandry Taemyr proposes is not demonstrable across the span of Caspian blue's edits. [If it is necessary to present diffs which inform this conclusory statement, I will invest in follow-up with further research, but I am understandably unwilling to do so without some prodding.]
Setting aside the intractable inconvenience of harsh reality and deciding to adopt Taemyr's articulation is a wholesome step away from controversey: If we tentatively accept Taemyr's formulation as axiomatic, then the artificial "primary topic" is revealed in a context of corollaries. Yonsei is then identifiable as an essential and integral extension of a set of Japanese terms which has already been accepted and integrated into the corpus of the English language.
Philology
Yonsei should be accepted as the Wikipedia primary topic for philological reasons. The term evolves naturally out of the following context:
Immigrant -- plural and singular
- Transclusion error: {{En}} is only for use in File namespace. Use {{langx|en}} or {{in lang|en}} instead. Issei: 1st generation immigrant, Japanese-born non-citizen/alien in a new nation-state and non-Japanese culture
- Transclusion error: {{En}} is only for use in File namespace. Use {{langx|en}} or {{in lang|en}} instead. Nisei: 2nd generation immigrant, child of Japanese-born immigrants, American- or Canadian-born citizen in a new nation-state and non-Japanese culture
- Transclusion error: {{En}} is only for use in File namespace. Use {{langx|en}} or {{in lang|en}} instead. Sansei: 3rd generation immigrant, grandchild of Japanese-born immigrants, American- or Canadian-born citizen of American- or Canadian-born citizens in a non-Japanese nation-state and non-Japanese culture
- Transclusion error: {{En}} is only for use in File namespace. Use {{langx|en}} or {{in lang|en}} instead. Yonsei: 4th generation immigrant, great-grandchild of Japanese-born immigrants, American- or Canadian-born citizen of American- or Canadian-born citizens who were themselves progeny of Americans or Canadians
Emigrant
- Transclusion error: {{En}} is only for use in File namespace. Use {{langx|en}} or {{in lang|en}} instead. Issei: 1st generation emigrant, Japanese-born emigrant living and working in a non-Japanese cultural millieu
- Transclusion error: {{En}} is only for use in File namespace. Use {{langx|en}} or {{in lang|en}} instead. Nisei: 2nd generation child of Japanese emigrant living and working in a non-Japanese national cultural millieu
- Transclusion error: {{En}} is only for use in File namespace. Use {{langx|en}} or {{in lang|en}} instead. Sansei: 3rd generation emigrant grand-child of Japanese emigrant living and working in a non-Japanese cultural millieu
- ((en)) Yonsei:4th generation emigrant great-grandchild of Japanese emigrant living and working in a non-Japanese cultural millieu
Politics
Yonsei should be accepted as the Wikipedia primary topic for political reasons.
The US and Canadian governments officially apologized to the Issei, Nisei and Sansei internees of World War II; and significant reparations payments were made to survivors in 1988. This came about largely as the consequence of political and legal actions undertaken by the Sansei who construed the wartime events as violations of civil rights rather than merely racial discrimination. Those who pushed for this acknowledgement of past wrongs were specifically motivated, in part, to affect the progeny of the internees, i.e., the Yonsei.
Sociology
Yonsei should be accepted as the Wikipedia primary topic for sociological reasons.
The trans-generational labelling is a distinctive feature of Japanese emigrant or Nikkei communities. This noteworthy phenomenon is found in a majority of national Nikkei communities in North and South America; but, curiously, it is not a feature of the way Japanese Britons view themselves. It is less marked in post-War Australia than in North America and in Latin America.
In addition, the official governmental intervention in cross-generational relationships and in the family structures of the Issei, Nisei, and Sansei has been studied as a unique sociological phenomenon which is distinct from other immigrant experiences. The expectation that Yonsei would be largely unaffected by these phenomenon has been affected by the effects of the extremely active and successful political and legal successes of their parents, the Samsei -- thus producing unanticipated consequences.
Conclusion: Yonsei is demonstrably a "Primary topic"
For the reasons presented above, Yonsei -- the Japanese generational emigrant term which is commonly used in English-speaking North American coutries, in Spanish-speaking Latin American countries, and in Portugese-speaking Brazil should be understood as a "primary topic".
The presumptive argument that anyone will be confused or unable to located the Korean university in Seoul -- Yonsei University -- is unavailing. The fact that an internet search for "Yonsei" produces more hits having to do with the university is interesting, but not compelling in this Wikipedia context. --Tenmei (talk) 22:13, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
Raising the level of dispute
Caspian blue -- My interest here is in raising the level of dispute; and that means
Neither the quality of Wikipedia articles nor the level of dispute is enhanced by innuendo, not by derision, not by attempting to be offensive, confrontational, inflammatory, provocative ... and your recent edits give me cause to worry that somehow I might have failed inform you in terms that are clear, plain, unambiguous? --Tenmei (talk) 15:07, 21 November 2008 (UTC)