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Opinion: The problematic use of 'problematic' to shut down people with whom we disagree - Los Angeles Times

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  tacos  •  8 months ago  •  6 comments

By:   Robin AbcarianColumnist (Los Angeles Times)

Opinion: The problematic use of 'problematic' to shut down people with whom we disagree - Los Angeles Times
Why choose a vague word as the smug shorthand for something morally objectionable? A backlash against 'problematic' seems to be brewing.

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"Tropic Thunder" director/actor Ben Stiller in 2008 promoting the problematic movie, in which Robert Downey Jr. wears blackface. (Jacques Brinon / Associated Press) ByRobin AbcarianColumnist Aug. 30, 2023 3 AM PT

Opinion Columnist

Robin Abcarian

My first unpleasant encounter with the current meaning of the word "problematic" occurred a couple of years ago.

I was mingling with some twenty- and thirtysomethings at an outdoor birthday party in San Francisco. It was a bit chilly, as San Francisco usually is, but a distinct and quite different chill fell over my little conversation group as we began to discuss Ben Stiller's "Tropic Thunder," the hilarious (in my opinion) movie that spoofed Hollywood careerism and war movies.

I don't remember why, exactly, we were talking about a film that came out in 2008. But all these years later, I said, I was still laughing at Tom's Cruise surprising role as fat-fingered, balding studo boss Les Grossman, a filthy-mouthed bully who — it was rumored — was based on the producer Scott Rudin and/or Harvey Weinstein, legendary industry monsters who both happen to be Jewish.

One woman looked at me and said, "That role was problematic."

"But it was satire," I replied. "It was funny."

"It was still problematic," she said. "He was channeling Jewish stereotypes."

At that point, I thought it best not to mention one of the movie's other stars, Robert Downey Jr., who played a white Australian actor playing a Black American Vietnam war vet. In blackface.

Feeling wrongfully admonished, I changed the subject.

But ever since, I've wondered how the word "problematic," so vague, had become such an effective insult and shorthand for someone's (well, my ) moral failure or insensitivity.

I plugged the word "problematic" into the Google Ngram Viewer, a website that shows patterns of word usage in English-language literature, and discovered that its use has soared in the last few decades and shows no signs of slowing.

But why?

In a 2021 Atlantic essay, Oxford political theory professor Teresa M. Bejan offered a possible answer:

"Academics like me love to describe things as 'problematic.' But what do we mean? We're not saying that the thing in question is unsolvable or even difficult. We're saying — or implying — that it is objectionable in some way, that it rests uneasily with our prior moral or political commitments. ... It relies on a subtle sort of bullying in place of mutual justification. It excludes,rather than explains."

Bingo.

I would suggest that the word "problematic" has evolved to its current charged usage because the phrase "politically incorrect," once used ironically by smug leftists, was hijacked by smug conservatives to denote rigid left-wing ideological conformity. According to the Ngram Viewer, the use of "politically correct" and "politically incorrect" has fallen dramatically in the last several years after surging in the years between 1980 and 1997. (That kind of cancellation is pretty much what happened to the word "liberal," when the late MAGA Republican Rush Limbaugh turned it into his favorite epithet.)

Back in 2016, when former President Trump was first running, Slate published an essay about the trouble with "problematic" and its tendency to obscure what's really being said.

"You don't often hear people saying that Donald Trump's latest rants about immigrants or women are problematic, " wrote Haley Swenson. "Instead, his words are called racist, sexist, and dangerous. But when it comes to conversations about culture and representation, we apparently feel the need to undercut, obscure, and distance ourselves from our own arguments."

Several years before Trump began his political ascent, a high school student named Liat Kaplan started an anonymous Tumblr page called "Your Fave is Problematic," a less direct way of highlighting the problem with "problematic."

As Kaplan explained it years later in the New York Times, "The posts contained long lists of celebrities' regrettable (racist, sexist, homophobic, transphobic, ethnophobic, ableist and so on) statements and actions — the stuff that gets people canceled these days."

With satisfaction, I've noticed at least the beginning of a backlash has been brewing against "problematic," and its snotty little cousin "deeply problematic."

The essayist Jill Filipovic said as much earlier this month when she confessed in the Atlantic that she regretted embracing the concept of "trigger warnings."

"Back then," she wrote, "I was convinced that such warnings were sometimes necessary to convey the seriousness of the topics at hand (the term deeply problematic appears a mortifying number of times under my byline)."

The other day, I watched "Tropic Thunder" again for the first time in years.

It trades on and pokes fun at stereotypes of Black people, white people, Asian people, Jewish people, actors, agents, studio heads, war heroes. I wonder if it would get green lighted today.

Personally, I found Cruise's star turn as Grossman just as hilarious and true as the first time I saw it, maybe even more so because his alleged inspirations — Rudin and Weinstein — have gotten their karmic comeuppance in the wake of the MeToo movement.

Offensive? Perhaps. Over the top? For sure. But problematic? Banish the thought.

@robinkabcarian


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Tacos!
Professor Guide
1  seeder  Tacos!    8 months ago

Abcarian is normally a pretty liberal columnist. Are we maybe seeing the beginnings of a swing away from the extremes of political correctness? I hope so, but I have my doubts. I feel like it helps when the pushback comes from liberals invested in free speech.

We need to be able to tell jokes again. We have become the country that refuses to laugh at anything.

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Principal
1.1  Sparty On  replied to  Tacos! @1    8 months ago

Yep.    Free speech is easy ….. when you agree with it.

It only gets hard when you don’t.

 
 
 
Just Jim NC TttH
Professor Principal
1.2  Just Jim NC TttH  replied to  Tacos! @1    8 months ago
We have become the country that refuses to laugh at anything.

And traded in that ability to be perpetually offended...............

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
2  JohnRussell    8 months ago

"Problematic" is an inbetween use of a word. I think there are shades and degrees of racism, far right ideology, wokeness, cancel culture, and whatever other social stance one wants to comment on. "Problematic " allows a critique or criticism of an idea or action without going hog wild about it. It just denotes an area on a sliding scale of commentary. Nothing to get worked up over. 

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Principal
3  Sparty On    8 months ago

Oh man, Cruise’s portrayal of Grossman was …. well ….. genius.

Full belly laugh funny.

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
4  Trout Giggles    8 months ago

When I read or hear the word "problematic" I think of a problem that needs a solution. I guess I need to join the 2020's

 
 

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