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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Wikipedia is U.S.-centric  





2 Wikipedia uses a foreign name for a place in my country  





3 Wikipedia uses a foreign name for a person from my country  





4 That's not the history I know  



4.1  Factual information  





4.2  Discussing the objectives or intents of historical figures  





4.3  Discussing alternative histories  







5 "Wikipedia misrepresents my country" or "I consider writing on a foreign country"  














User:Zocky/Country bias

















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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

< User:Zocky

This page neads a good name. Suggestions are welcome.

This is supposed to be the FAQ for people who think wikipedia is biased against their country/nation. The intention is to replace answers to recurring issues with a link to this FAQ thus avoiding endless discussions and decreasing the general level of aggrevation.

The introduction needs to be improved. It should be kept short, though. This also needs links to policy and naming conventions, as well as to other FAQs.


Wikipedia is an international encyclopaedia and should be equally readable and understandable for all readers, regardless of where they come from, and it should not take sides. Where popular beliefs in two countries differ, both should be presented fairly.

If you think that your country/nation is represented unfairly or that an article is offensive to your country, please read these explanations of commonly raised issues

Wikipedia is U.S.-centric

[edit]

It shouldn't be, but it sometimes is. Because this is the English-language Wikipedia, a disproportionately high number of editors are American and other native English speakers.

Wikipedia uses a foreign name for a place in my country

[edit]

Many places, particularly those which are -- or used to be -- important internationally have different names in different languages. This is especially true if the ethnic composition of a place has changed through time or if border changes have "moved" a place to a different country.

Wikipedia uses names of places which are most commonly used in English. Some places have English names which are unrelated to the local name (Egypt, India), others have names based on the local names but changed because of history or phonetic and spelling incompatibilities (Croatia). Sometimes this name has a specific English form (Germany), but most are same or almost the same as in some other language (Vienna, Cologne).

Some things to consider:

Wikipedia uses a foreign name for a person from my country

[edit]

Names of some famous people (especially from history) are spelled and pronounced differently in different languages (Aristotle, Christopher Columbus). Also, in some periods, it was common for people to use translations of their names in other languages, particularly Latin, and some English names are derived from these translations.

Names of foreign monarchs and nobility are commonly (but not always) translated in many languages, so George III of the United Kingdom is known in other languages as "Siôr III", "Jerzy III", "Georg III", "Jurij III", "Jorge III" and many other variants. Again, Wikipedia uses the one most commonly used in English.

That's not the history I know

[edit]

There are several kinds of history. The first is the one taught in schools, which helps form the sense of identity for people in a country. It is always somewhat biased: it concentrates on the parts of history important for that country and it describes events from that country's point of view. One country's days of glory can be another country's age of foreign occupation.

Another kind is the "history" created by popular mythology and media. Some of it may be accurate and some maybe outrageous misrepresentations. This is the kind of history we should report (including its sources), but never present as facts. (Indeed, it may be interesting to document facts such as the deliberate omission of some historical episode in the standard history curriculum of a country.)

Yet another kind of history is the one that takes all views into account and tries to establish facts through careful research of written sources and evidence. Wikipedia is an encyclopedia and it's international, so it's interested in this kind of history.

Factual information

[edit]

Discussing the objectives or intents of historical figures

[edit]

Many historical disputes do not focus on the historical facts (who invaded whom...) but on the intentions, objectives, beliefs and future plans of political leaders. Such concerns are inherently subject to speculation, since there are usually fairly few hard facts to validate one thesis or another. Depending on one's national and political point of view, one may be more likely to believe the pretended intents of some leader, or believe that their "real intents" were otherwise.

Discussing alternative histories

[edit]

Another possible area of dispute is speculations as to what could have happened should some historical event not have occured, or occured differently. These often arise in arguments excusing a country from some behavior considered reprehensible: "sure, this action was dreadful, but if they had not done it, worse things would have happened".

"Wikipedia misrepresents my country" or "I consider writing on a foreign country"

[edit]

In all countries, the education system and the media propagate some false or inexact information on foreign countries, sometimes intentionally, but often by error and inertia. Information that people believe because they heard in school and heard it repeated in the media may simply be a self-replicating error. It is therefore not surprising that such inadequate representations may occasionally creep in encyclopedia articles. On Wikipedia, we must do as much as possible in order to remove such misinformation.


Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Zocky/Country_bias&oldid=383842203"

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This page was last edited on 9 September 2010, at 14:50 (UTC).

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