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  • waldenMA
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    7 months ago

    March 7, 2024

    • Brush: Maggard 24mm Synthetic
    • Razor: EldrormR Industries MM24
    • Blade: Personna GEM PTFE (6)
    • Lather: Barrister & Mann/Zingari Man - Nocturne - Soap
    • Post Shave: House of Mammoth - Santa Noir - Aftershave
    • Fragrance: Stirling Soap Co. - Varen - EdT (#MMarch24)

    Prepare yourself for a hot take - both of these brands aren’t really my cup of tea. Scott just isn’t my type of guy, and then there’s the whole “You named your brand after a marginalized people”, which I honestly can’t really take sides on. Sure, it’s bad to say “I got gypped”, but Heather never said that. On the other hand, I’ve seen other well-liked artisans call things retarded without being publicly reprimanded for it.

    I tried to use other brands that are named or themed after groups/places with some history of being marginalized. Mammoths were hunted to extinction, and Stirling Soap Co. is named after a place in Scotland. I could have also used Southern Witchcrafts but I had to draw the line somewhere!

    For the record, I’m neither here nor there about the Zingari branding, although sometimes there are certain soaps that make me scratch my head. I know Heather isn’t referring to slave owners, but maybe don’t use “Master” if your brand is already under scrutiny by a big group of wetshaving gatekeepers.

    • gcgallant
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      7 months ago

      Absolutely terrific comment! I tend to focus on Heather’s products rather than her company name. On the name, I give her the benefit of the doubt. It is highly unlikely that she knowingly chose a brand name that is insulting to a group of people. But I think her products are terrific. If I have an opportunity to meet her at Maggard’s in April, I’ll ask her.

    • djundjilaMA
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      7 months ago

      You named your brand after a marginalized people

      That’s missing the point. It’s named after a racial slur used to refer to a marginalised people. Important difference IMO.

      Stirling is named after a locality, not an insult for its inhabitants

      • waldenMA
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        7 months ago

        My references to other brands were tongue in cheek, but maybe still in bad taste.

        I keep hearing people say it’s racist, but I can’t find anything on the internet about it. All I can find is that in Italy it’s sometimes used as an offensive word, but it also just means “Gypsy/Roma” or is used to describe someone who likes to travel. Being an American, I have no reference to how the word is used in other parts of the world, but all of the articles I can find don’t paint the same picture as what people are saying on Reddit.

        Words can have multiple meanings and it heavily depends on the intent.

        Maybe I’m naive, but is it similar to “gringo”? I’ve been called gringo while traveling and it doesn’t bother me, but at the same time that word can be used as an “offensive” word.

        There are 4 businesses within 50 miles of me that use Zingari or Zingaro in their name. It’s not done to be offensive.

        Antônio Carlos Jobim, a very talented and respected musician, write a song called “Zingaro”. Again, not offensive.

        There’s an opera called “Zingari”. Again, not meant to be offensive in that case.

        The word Zingari simply isn’t used in America (aside from the restaurants that popped up in a search), so if someone is searching for what to call their soap business and is presented with the same Google results that I’ve seen… I see nothing wrong with it.

        • djundjilaMA
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          7 months ago

          “Gringo” may be offensive, but there’s no history of oppression there. (Like “cracker” vs the nword, they’re not the same).

          Ion the case of Zingaro, Tsigani, Zigeuner, Gitan there is. The history of oppression includes systematic attempts of eradication and forced family separations similar to the situation with the Canadian Indian residential schools.

          presented with the same Google results that I’ve seen… I see nothing wrong with it.

          I mean, the first sentence on English Wikipedia:

          Zingaro is an Italian derogatory word for a Romani man.

          This may be more of a European thing, but systemic racism against Roma is very much still alive and causing a lot of harm.

          I get that Heather had some romantic traveller and adventure image in mind, but that feels a lot like the seemingly benevolent racism behind the noble savage narrative about native Americans?

          • waldenMA
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            7 months ago

            This may be more of a European thing

            I guess so. I have to do my “research” online because other than the hive mind of social media, I have no other reference to the word. Obviously the best thing to do would be to go out and find some Roma people and ask them what they think, but from what I’ve read online I’d get different answers from different people. Wikipedia is the only place that says it’s 100% derogatory, and even then there’s no official “page” for it.

            Wiktionary, Collins Dictionary, Cambridge Dictionary, and Oxford Dictionary only go as far as to say it might be considered offensive depending on who’s listening, who’s saying it, and how they’re saying it.

            The word gypsy has gotten more and more unacceptable during my lifetime, despite the fact that some Roma people still call themselves that. Gypsy has worse etymology than zingaro. It’s similar to how Native Americans get called Indians because people thought they were from India. Roma people were thought to be from Egypt, so they got called Gypsies. So here I am trying to defend Heather, when all of a sudden

            I had never heard the word Zingari/Zingaro until I started wetshaving. Ignorance isn’t an excuse, but I’m trying to do my research here and all I can find is “it’s offensive if used in an offensive manner”.