Reykjavík Grapevine


Reykjavík Grapevine - 05.05.2017, Síða 18

Reykjavík Grapevine - 05.05.2017, Síða 18
Poll: Most Icelanders Support Equal Pay Law Words: Alice Demurtas Photo: Art Bicnick NEWS Iceland made interna- tional headlines last month with the passage of the so-called “equal pay law.” The law itself is complex in structure, but one key feature is that it would require compa- nies with 25 employees or more to guarantee that male and female employees are being paid the same wages for the same work. While the law was rife with grumblings and objections from some (almost entirely male) MPs, it turns out that most Icelandic voters support the measure. According to a new poll from Market and Media Research, 60.1% of those surveyed were either very supportive (36.3%) or rather sup- portive (23.8%) of the law. By con- trast, only 20.8% were either rath- er against (8.4%) or very against (12.4%) it, with the remaining 19.2% decidedly neutral on the subject. To the surprise of absolutely no one, the demographic breakdown shows more women than men support the law. It was also most popular amongst those aged 18 to 29 and, in terms of income, had the greatest opposition from those making a million ISK or more per month. Politically, Progres- sive Party voters were the most opposed, while Left-Greens had the highest levels of support. Endangered Language Words: Halldór Armand Ásgeirsson They’re saying you’re killing our language. What do you think about that? You and the smart- phones. You don’t understand us, so we speak English to you, because we all watched ‘Baywatch’ undubbed as children. What happens when the Internet of Things arrives? Will my toilet be able to speak Icelandic to me? Hardly. I will have to communicate with it using my pre- cious Baywatch-English, asking it to read me a Volvo owner’s manual while I release my waste into it. And this is the prob- lem now. In all sincerity and se- riousness this is causing us wor- ries. Will globalization try to kill our language? Will Facebook and the other Guardians of the Future try to gradually force us and oth- ers like us into using English be- cause, well, it’s more convenient for them to conduct their global control that way? Or will they see the light and try to help us? It is true that you hear Eng- lish everywhere these days and, yes, it’s flowing from the lips of Icelanders as well. Is it because of the smart- phones? The lack of proper Netflix sub- titles? The media is saying we need something like a billion krónur to propel our ancient language into the digital realm. Will that save the language? Really? Is the problem re- ally that Siri thinks I’m asking for something called a “pussy store” when I’m actually asking her to Google “Passíusálmarnir,” an epic 17th century collection of hymns recounting the history of the pain and suffering of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ? One is tempted to think the problem runs a little deeper than that. Maybe it’s just the Baywatch- curse—the other side of the coin of learning to speak good English at an early age. We could call it the Seinfeldization of the Mind. It would actually be interesting to see research that compared how many Icelanders have seen every single episode of ‘Seinfeld’ with the number who’ve read every book by Halldór Laxness. We now have generations that are much more familiar with something we could—rather naively—call “Free World Pop Culture” than with their own unexciting cultural her- itage of mud farms, repulsive food and stories of poor people. It has its downside. Their whole world of references, ideas and humour comes from the FWPC, and that’s why they increasingly use English to communicate. It’s not that they don’t know or don’t want to speak Icelandic or that their smartphone is manipulating them into using English only, but that their inner world can increasingly only—well, at least fully—be communicated through English. A nice example is the word “actually” that now seems to be part of common Ice- landic usage. This is of course the trend ev- erywhere. We live in a world that rejects isolation, which is a neces- sary ingredient of everything “lo- cal.” Local is disappearing, that’s why it’s been a trend in advertis- ing for years (“We’re a local nico- tine gum manufacturer with a passion for creating artisan gum for addicts using only environ- mentally friendly and sustain- able…”). Icelandic will perhaps sooner than we think be on the Endangered Species list of lan- guages. Or not. Who knows re- ally. Right now at least it looks destined to become a sad mockery of itself. People were saying the same thing in the 19th century, yea yea I know, but at least they didn’t have to worry about the Big Leak, when their frequent search- es for “Pussy Stores” and other wonders would come to light. 18 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 07 — 2017 R E S T A U R A N T & B A R

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