Talk:Marie Sophie Hingst

Latest comment: 8 months ago by WhatamIdoing in topic Describing suicide
Featured articleMarie Sophie Hingst is a featured article; it (or a previous version of it) has been identified as one of the best articles produced by the Wikipedia community. Even so, if you can update or improve it, please do so.
Article milestones
DateProcessResult
June 23, 2023Good article nomineeListed
November 9, 2023Featured article candidatePromoted
Did You Know
A fact from this article appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the "Did you know?" column on July 17, 2023.
The text of the entry was: Did you know ... that when the German-Irish historian Marie Sophie Hingst was revealed to be faking descent from Holocaust survivors, the media of different countries disagreed on how to report on it?
Current status: Featured article

GA Review edit

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


This review is transcluded from Talk:Marie Sophie Hingst/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Reviewer: Kusma (talk · contribs) 21:49, 12 June 2023 (UTC)Reply

Will take this one (can read the German sources), comments to follow over the next few days. Who knows, maybe I will even find another hook for your DYK nom :) —Kusma (talk) 21:49, 12 June 2023 (UTC)Reply

Thanks, Kusma! I've had everything looked over by native speaker friends, but feel free to tell me if I still got any titles or quotes mistranslated or anything misrepresented -- it's great to have as many eyes as possible on it. Looking forward to your comments in general. Vaticidalprophet 22:05, 12 June 2023 (UTC)Reply
Only managed half of the article so far, got distracted by too much reading of sources and my own research. Pretty happy so far, only minor comments and totally optional suggestions. Need sleep now. —Kusma (talk) 22:24, 13 June 2023 (UTC)Reply

Content and prose review edit

Going through section by section, lead at the end. I'm doing my own research as I go along, you are free to ignore that.

  • Early life: Did Hingst invent her Jewish background before she started university? Can we have her real background first and talk about the invented background later? (According to Deutsche Welle (a fine RS) she claimed 22 Holocaust victims among her relatives on September 8, 2013). I think it would make more sense to have birth/family/pre-Dublin studies, then a new paragraph with invented background, moving to Dublin and blogging.
  • She apparently went to high school in Dessau, more than 30km from Wittenberg, why omit that? (it is in Doerry's article).
    Now you state she grew up in Dessau, which isn't what the sources tell us. She may have commuted to Dessau or moved closer to there around age 15 -- all we know is the sources say she was raised in Lutherstadt Wittenberg and graduated from high school in Dessau.
    • ...oh yeah, whoops. Hm. I'm not entirely sure how to handle this, actually. Will play with it for a little, because yeah, that's an oddly specific distance for a high school. Vaticidalprophet 11:53, 23 June 2023 (UTC)Reply
    Moved this into the sentence about her educational history more broadly, and specified that she attended high school in Dessau without specifying her background any more than implied by sources. Vaticidalprophet 11:55, 23 June 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • You are careful not to claim she finished her PhD, but it appears she did. If you want a secondary source claiming it, Doerry and Schneider and Ofrath all say so.
  • Link Die Goldenen Blogger [de]? (She beat Übermedien [de] and Raul Krauthausen to the prize, not bad) If you want something more positive that she did, she wrote daily postcards to Deniz Yücel while he was in jail in Turkey. Unfortunately his article about her is paywalled :(
  • If you care for primary sources, here is "Sophie Roznblatt"'s article (not on the ZEIT website anymore, they took it down and apologised.
  • "She was a former employee of the Selma Stern Center". I think this reads better without "former"; better say something like "for some time before [year], she was employed by the Selma Stern Center".
    This still needs looking at.
    • I'm not entirely sure what to do about this part. "For some time before 2019" would be...technically accurate but overspecific? I'll change it to that for now, but I don't quite like either phrasing. Vaticidalprophet 11:53, 23 June 2023 (UTC)Reply
    Have changed to this. Vaticidalprophet 11:54, 23 June 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • "art history as a sandwich", hmm, more the thing ON the sandwich, but it is hard to convey this for an audience from a less bread-crazy culture. I would expect an English version to be something like "art history on toast" instead of the more literal "art history as sandwich topping".
    Can we go for "art history on a sandwich"? "toast" really sounds like something fairly bare, not like the elaborate things presented in the book. The Twitter feed has "Art history through bread toppings".
    • Yeah, I'll change back the 'sandwich' part and phrase it as 'on'. It's a little tricky in the enwiki context, because English speakers don't tend to think of open-faced sandwiches. Vaticidalprophet 11:53, 23 June 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • Der Spiegel outing: "referencing a case where Der Spiegel had themselves been taken in by a fraudulent journalist the preceding year" I haven't checked the source, but I assume this is about Relotius; why not mention his name here (you do so later)?
  • " and worried he may be" shouldn't it be "and worried he might be"?
  • Death and aftermath: "Doerry commented to The Irish Times under the promise his statements would not be published" can you use something other than "commented" here? it sounds odd.
  • "In the weeks after her death, Scally published an article for The Irish Times " did he really publish it over several weeks?
  • Not totally convinced all of the redlinked people are notable
  • Identity: I learned a new meaning of "cachet".
  • Lead: "a German-Irish historian and blogger" any evidence for Irish citizenship? not mentioned in body
  • Can you say "a sexologist to refugees"? ("for" better than "to" here? I am not a native speaker of English so sometimes wrong.)
    Perhaps "sex educator" would work better; she wasn't claiming to do theoretical research, but to teach about practicalities.
  • "and worked with Jewish communities across Europe" is not an award or recognition.
  • Can you strip someone of recognition? It sounds a bit strange.

Overall, nice work. Not too much to complain about. Spotchecks to follow. —Kusma (talk) 22:24, 14 June 2023 (UTC)Reply

  • See above for additional comments. If I didn't add comments, I am either happy with your action or accept your inaction. —Kusma (talk) 08:18, 15 June 2023 (UTC)Reply

General comments and GA criteria edit

  • Image licensing is fine. Non-free image is acceptable.
  • Prose issues see above. Reads neutral to me, and there are no stability issues.
  • Broadness: OK I think. For "comprehensive", I'd like to know more about her blog and her book.
  • Referencing is consistently layouted and mostly from quality newspapers and magazines, reasonable sources for the topic.
  • Spot checks:
    • 7 checks out
    • 8 checks out. But it is a news agency text from dpa, so "staff writer" is slightly misleading as the writer was not from DIE ZEIT.
    • 13 checks out. Title translation might be better as "Blogger puts art on bread" or more literally "Blogger brings art onto bread" but yours is OK
    • 18 checks out, but it would be nice to explain that "University Times" is a student newspaper when you mention it.
    • 26 checks out.

Nothing major, quite a nice article on a sensitive topic, well done. —Kusma (talk) 22:37, 14 June 2023 (UTC)Reply

Thanks so much for your review! Most suggestions have been done here. The nationality thing is tricky -- she didn't get citizenship as far as I can tell, but she was living and working in Dublin for a very large chunk of her adult life, and it's clear from the way the sources describe it that she planned to live there indefinitely. Do you have suggestions on how to put it? Vaticidalprophet 01:38, 15 June 2023 (UTC)Reply
My own identity is "a German mathematician living in England" or "an England-based German mathematician", and while I have lived here for quite some time and plan to continue living here indefinitely, I would not describe myself as "German-British" or something unless I acquire citizenship at some point. Anything of the type "a German historian and blogger living in Ireland" or "an Ireland-based German blogger and impostor" would be an improvement. I will look through your other changes and see whether I think anything more needs doing. —Kusma (talk) 08:06, 15 June 2023 (UTC)Reply
I think I have most of these now, Kusma :) Am finally in a position to edit regularly-enough again. The redlinks are a little tricky -- I tend to redlink prolifically. I'll probably look back over post-GAN pre-FAC at them and see if there's anyone who's especially non-notable. Vaticidalprophet 11:57, 23 June 2023 (UTC)Reply
@Vaticidalprophet, I think you have enough of them now for GA :) As I said, I would prefer "sex educator" to "sexologist" in the lead, but do that as you please. —Kusma (talk) 16:57, 23 June 2023 (UTC)Reply
Good Article review progress box
Criteria: 1a. prose ( ) 1b. MoS ( ) 2a. ref layout ( ) 2b. cites WP:RS ( ) 2c. no WP:OR ( ) 2d. no WP:CV ( )
3a. broadness ( ) 3b. focus ( ) 4. neutral ( ) 5. stable ( ) 6a. free or tagged images ( ) 6b. pics relevant ( )
Note: this represents where the article stands relative to the Good Article criteria. Criteria marked   are unassessed
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

Describing suicide edit

Per MOS:SUICIDE, we should try to avoid using "committed" when describing suicide: "... many external style guides discourage it as being potentially stigmatising and offensive to some people. There are many other appropriate, common, and encyclopedic ways to describe a suicide ..." It's not banned, but its heavily discouragement is nevertheless instructive. Ed [talk] [majestic titan] 15:31, 20 July 2023 (UTC)Reply

The unilateral "not banned but discouraged" wording in MOS:SUICIDE is essentially a supervote-override of one of the most overwhelming consensuses I've ever seen in a MOS discussion, and the attached list of 'alternatives' by one editor emphatically does not agree with every other discussion had on the subject in every other fora, where all of those phrasings are regularly criticised and debated. There is no agreed-perfect-term to refer to suicides; all of them are disputed and stir strong feelings, as you would expect from the subject matter. I do not consider any of the alternatives usable in this article:
  • "Died by suicide" and equivalent constructs are terms about which I can write about twenty pages when I let myself, so I'll try not to. To summarize: the bone some people have to pick with "committed suicide" is that they find it insensitive. I find this term insensitive in all of the same aspects on top of being an English as She Is Spoke construct, and am as intensely and virulently offended by its use (on purely meritorious grounds, before getting into the latter issue) as I gather some people are by "committed suicide". The practice some people have of insisting preferrers of "committed suicide" disclose their whole mental health histories to be listened to is disgustingly inappropriate, but the people who have forced me to do so (of which there are a few onwiki) should hopefully at this point recognize that I have actual grounds to consider this "a deeply offensive pseudo-euphemism that minimalizes the impact of suicide and focuses on 'family groups' and 'allies' over the opinions of the actually directly relevant people"; it's person-first language for a new age.
  • "Killed oneself" and "took one's own life"/"died by one's own hand" are both appropriate ways to step around the subject in some articles, but neither of them work here, because both of them have encyclopedic-tone concerns in opposite directions. "Encyclopedic tone" is closer to a mirage than a ruleset, such that these are all perfectly acceptable bends of it in many contexts. However, tone for this article is a particularly important consideration. "Killed herself" would be obviously, immediately inappropriate, because in general use (rather than a few style guides) it's consistently considered a much blunter and more informal phrasing than "committed suicide". "Took own life"/"died by own hand" skews towards the opposite problem of being inappropriately evasive about an issue that really left no opportunity for evasion; they're useful terms in some articles, but a subject whose notability is inherently intertwined with their suicide isn't one it works for especially well.
Vaticidalprophet 22:31, 20 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
You clearly have a strong personal preference against using this language, and I can understand that. However, that's the guideline and I'm not seeing any significant challenges on the guideline's talk page since the section was added. I would encourage you to start a RfC on the topic if you feel that strongly. Ed [talk] [majestic titan] 01:41, 21 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
The guideline explicitly says that the term is usable and refers to an RfC with an overwhelming consensus in favour of allowing its use, that explicitly makes it clear that going through changing existing uses is inappropriate, which itself is backed up by other guidelines such as MOS:VAR. Vaticidalprophet 02:18, 21 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
VAR refers to style, not a content dispute, and the guideline explicitly recommends not using your preferred formulation. I've sent out an invitation for additional comments from potentially interested editors. Ed [talk] [majestic titan] 16:49, 21 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
I came here from Wikipedia talk:Manual of Style/Medicine-related articles. I think its misleading to argue the RfC had "an overwhelming consensus in favour of allowing its use". This is not accurate. In the words of the WhatamIdoing, who was instrumental in formulating and developing the RFC: "There [was] a consensus not to prohibit the committed language, but there was not a consensus to preserve any existing instances. This means: It's okay to remove the committed language." Damien Linnane (talk) 08:19, 22 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
The actual close of the RfC cautions against "tendentiously removing" existing uses. (I have very definitely read the discussion that you linked before removing it.) "It's okay to remove the language" is a perfectly true statement in the same sense that it is to make any other change to an article; that does not mean all of those changes are ideal, uncontroversial, or improve that article. "We can't literally ban this thing that several times as many editors emphatically opposed the ban of as agreed should be, but we're going to de facto ban it anyway" is an extreme run-around of consensus. Vaticidalprophet 08:24, 22 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
It would help if editors had a shared understanding of what constituted a removal (or addition) that was tendentious, and what constituted one that was not tendentious, and how other editors could tell the difference. In our current state, all removals that anyone disagrees with get accused of being tendentious.
Short of that agreement, it would likely help if editors in these disputes would pay more attention to another part of MOS:SUICIDE: Language choices sometimes carry connotations that are not obvious to every editor. A term or phrase that sounds normal to you might sound stigmatising, offensive, or biased to someone else. Here are some common tips, but if someone suggests a change, try to learn about their viewpoint and see if a better approach can be found.
For example, @Vaticidalprophet, I believe you are the only editor to express the view that "Killed herself" would be obviously, immediately inappropriate in any article, and I am very excited about this insight. I do wish you'd tell me more. I fully agree with you about it being blunt (but I'm the sort of unsympathetic, inhumane editor who goes about squashing false hope all over medical articles, so blunt's in my comfort zone), and I think you are probably be right about it being less formal than the "committed" language. If you don't think it's especially germane to this discussion, that's fine, but I'd still like to hear about it (perhaps on my talk page, if you think that's better). WhatamIdoing (talk) 20:50, 22 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
As noted -- it's blunt and relatively less formal. This is not to say it's a categorically inappropriate phrasing on Wikipedia at all; article tone is complicated, and there are definitely contexts I'd use it, or use its opposites on that spectrum in the "took own life"/"died by own hand" corner. This would mostly be subjects who were primarily notable for things other than the circumstances around their death.
Consider the hypothetical phrasings he took his own life following the Alzheimer's diagnosis or she killed herself the day after her daughter's funeral. Both of these would work well in some articles, e.g. the conclusion of a general "later life and death" for an unrelatedly-notable subject for the former. The latter might appear in a similar context, or possibly others; arguably it could appear in an article about a murder. Notably, they don't work switched -- if you interchange the phrasing of either, the sentence sounds much worse.
If you have a subject who is notable essentially for something that culminated in her suicide, you run into problems regarding inappropriately-evasive on one end and inappropriately-blunt on the other. I've written a lot of medical articles too, I definitely get what you mean about the tone thing. A very complicated article at the intersection of sociological-biography and journalistic ethics is definitely not an article I want to apply the same tone to I do writing about genetics, though. As you note, the spirit of the "take influence from the sources" rather than the close-paraphrase-y letter of it is also markedly further from "killed herself" -- note that in the body I use a very different way of putting it, and the clear suicide-statement appears in the much-less-capacity-for-nuance lead. Vaticidalprophet 00:38, 23 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
Also came from the MOS page, Oppose changing from "committed" per your reasoning. The edit should remain reverted until this discussion is complete. DarmaniLink (talk) 14:25, 22 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
Wikipedia:Village_pump_(policy)#RFC:_Change_wording_in_MOS:SUICIDE_to_better_reflect_the_supermajority_consensus_in_the_RFC_that_added_it
I went ahead and created an RFC per ed's suggestion. You're all more than welcome to comment. DarmaniLink (talk) 00:02, 23 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
For procedural reasons, I will no longer partake in this discussion. Hopefully this is adequate. DarmaniLink (talk) 17:24, 24 July 2023 (UTC)Reply

What terms do the best of the references use? I expect they follow the standards to not use "committed". For us to do otherwise has always seemed a POV vio to me. --Hipal (talk) 18:41, 21 July 2023 (UTC)Reply

Most of the sources pre-date her death, or aren't in English. The later English-language ones usually say something like "...was found dead. Foul play is not suspected". I believe that the modern UK media guidelines are especially stringent, so that, in most cases, they essentially amount to a ban on indicating that suicide is even suspected. WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:21, 21 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
In the meta case as opposed to the object case, I don't think the "use the exact wording of the sources" recommendation (for any formulation) works with how close paraphrasing (an essay without community consensus, but, much like the anti-consensus part of MOS:SUICIDE, still used to mass enforce its preferences) is currently interpreted by CCI. As it stands, "using wording too close to the source in too many articles" is considered justification for a dedicated page to be made going through all your edits and rewriting then revdelling any that are considered to do so. There is a substantial tension between "you should do this thing" and "doing this thing means every single one of your article contributions are at risk of being expunged"; the risk of the latter is an indication you should go out of your way to use different wording to the sources. (This is, again, true regardless of exactly what wording they use.) Vaticidalprophet 05:08, 22 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
I agree that editors should Wikipedia:Use our own words, but when we're stuck, I think that finding out what the sources say is not completely unreasonable. WhatamIdoing (talk) 20:40, 22 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
What we don't use is use words not in the references that changes the pov. --Hipal (talk) 16:11, 27 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
In some cases, a neutral tone requires you not to use the exact words in a cited source.
In other cases, it's not clear to all editors whether using other words actually change the point of view. Reasonable people could disagree over whether a source that wrote "She died of suicide" represents a viewpoint, or just a stylistic word choice. It can represent a POV, because some people, including some reliable sources, conceptualize suicide, particularly when it manifests in the form of years-long endless struggles, as a discrete disease (he died of cancer; she died of suicide; they died of heart disease) rather than an action, but it can also just represent someone's idea of what sounds good. WhatamIdoing (talk) 17:16, 27 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
I'm letting this sit so best as I can, but:
1. Most of the references aren't in English, and the non-English references word it multiple ways.
2. This edit also changed the wording in the body relating to "a person who was not Hingst and also didn't exist". There was no person to die in that case. It is possible, again, that the ideal wording for both the lead and the body might be a third option (but it would not be the same third option). There's no real arguable case, IMO, that "died by" could at all be used for the case in the body.
3. Per WAID's statements about "died by" sometimes representing a POV and sometimes not, and in particular, I want to note that the POV being implied in the uses of died-by that do are not appropriate here. If "died by" represents that stance I can certainly expand on my views on that stance, disability rights, suicide prevention, etc, that's a reason we shouldn't use it -- we emphatically should not say things implying Hingst's suicide was "the consequence of a disease", and undercutting literally every part of the surrounding circumstances as a consequence. Vaticidalprophet 15:16, 29 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
About the fictional character's fictional suicide, I'd be inclined to follow Hirtst's wording, if we knew what it was (and assuming it was in English). That's one approach that we would consider for a novel.
(For your #3, my comment above is specifically about dying "of" suicide, but otherwise I agree with you.) WhatamIdoing (talk) 04:51, 30 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
The German sources are not consistent: we have both "Selbstmord" (literally "self-murder"; this is used in the Lea Rosh source that is probably by the people closest to Hingst) and "Freitod" ("voluntary death"). The question of what verb to is less important than the noun in corresponding discussions about how to approach this subject in German. —Kusma (talk) 21:56, 23 July 2023 (UTC)Reply

The choice is not binary ("committed suicide" or "died by suicide"). The lead now says:

  • Hingst died by suicide on 17 July 2019 at the age of 31. Her fraud and death attracted attention across Europe.

When it passed GA, the lead said:

  • Hingst committed suicide on 17 July 2019 at the age of 31. Her fraud and death attracted attention across Europe. G

An alternate to both is:

  • Hingst's fraud attracted attention across Europe after her suicide on 17 July 2019 at the age of 31.

People can argue over suicide language forever ... or just re-cast the sentence.

But if ya'll can't agree to simply do that and move on, there was no policy or guideline or RFC reason to remove the "committed" in favor of "died by". SandyGeorgia (Talk) 21:46, 23 July 2023 (UTC)Reply

The tricky part about recasting the sentence is that her [fraud] and [death] attracted attention, not just her [fraud and death]. Scally wrote much of his article before her suicide; it was edited and published afterwards, but it's perfectly possible to imagine a counterfactual where she's alive, and international reporting happened nonetheless. It's also not the sole use of that wording in the article -- she also made up an imaginary real-mother who "committed suicide" (that is, as the reason why she wasn't alive to respond to comments). "Died by suicide" is even less appropriate for that one because there was no person to die, though "killed herself" is marginally-less-extremely-inappropriate than for Hingst herself. Even if we managed to find some way to recast the lead, the fake-real-mother remains much harder. Vaticidalprophet 13:09, 24 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
I like the idea of re-casting the sentence, and I've wondered whether the lead could accept something like "Her suicide prompted the journalists who had investigated her fraud to reconsider their publications", or something like that.
Also, instead of focusing on the exact date of her death, I think "a few weeks after her fraud was exposed" might be more relevant. The exact date is already in the first sentence. WhatamIdoing (talk) 17:58, 24 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
Her suicide prompted the journalists who had investigated her fraud to reconsider their publications -- Doerry dug in. Scally published, which arguably is reconsidering because he was seemingly much less open to publication when she was alive (per text of his article), but I'm not sure that corresponds to how most people would intuitively read that sentence. Most of the non-Spiegel German publications that reacted to the original fraud I'm also not confident stating "reconsidered it". The "reconsidering" was mostly media that didn't report when she was alive, interpreting the media that did through the lens of hindsight (always an advantage, hey).
I'm equivocal on exact-date-of-death. I do think exact-age needs to be preserved, though, because this is an infoboxless article the fact the minutiae dispute is "article says 'committed suicide'" and not "article doesn't have an infobox" says something about Wikipedia in the past few years, but I'm not sure exactly what and the unbeatably-major upside/purpose of infoboxes is "doesn't force readers to calculate age". Trying to recast the sentence mentally in a way that 1. does not say she x-ed suicide 2. may or may not give a date 3. does give an age and 4. isn't factually wrong is proving tricky. Vaticidalprophet 22:18, 24 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
To be clear: I am open to the possibility (emphasis) there's another way to put that sentence that might be a compromise. (I don't think there's any way at all to change the use in the body, but people seem to care less about that one, so I guess we'll be back here on TFA day.) I just genuinely cannot think of any, and I am not sure if this is purely a stress reaction to this, or what. I really don't mean to repeatedly go "sorry, all the proposals are wrong", but...I guess that's the reflection of how I feel about this whole mess in the first place. I emphatically Feel Like, to talk about it on that level, that when the wording was changed to 'died by' (as opposed to 'are there more ways to put it than that') I was descended upon by people who didn't want to work on the article when it was redlinked for four years, when there was a dewiki version they could translate from if they didn't want to write an enwiki version from scratch themselves, and could have used any wording they desire when doing so, to criticise the work they had every opportunity to do themselves. I'm not saying that's a completely objective description of the most universally agreed upon of all possible realities, I'm saying that's how I feel about it. I'm frustrated about this -- I'm extremely offended by 'died by suicide' (for reasons before the issue of "is it grammatically correct"; note person-first comparison) and don't personally think it should be used in any quality-assessed articles, but it is, because it's the wording some people use when they write those articles, and I respect their decision to do that as part of what it means to build a Patchwork Encyclopedia. Vaticidalprophet 22:37, 24 July 2023 (UTC) This is not a personal statement on any individuals. I'm trying to find a way to put the way I feel about this that reflects how I feel about this, so we can start from there and work out what different peoples' objections are to different things, without commenting on contributors rather than the-knock-on-effects-of-content. I am Going Through It™ for unrelated reasons and not currently a paragon of phrasing everything perfectly. Vaticidalprophet 22:44, 24 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
The phrase that originally occurred to me was that the journalists "engaged in criticism and self-criticism", but that's obviously not the right wording. Separating the pieces might help; you could add a separate sentence like "She was 31 years old". As a worst-case scenario (I agree with you that including her age is highly desirable), it could be put into the (birth – death) bit of the first sentence.
A least-characters-changed approach might look like changing:
Hingst something-ed suicide on 17 July 2019 at the age of 31. Her fraud and death attracted attention...
to
Hingst died on 17 July 2019 at the age of 31. Her fraud and suicide attracted attention...
or
Hingst died at the age of 31, a few weeks after the exposé. Her fraud and suicide attracted attention...
I don't love these alternatives, but perhaps they'll spark a better idea. None of this strikes me as an emergency, so I think we could probably sleep on it for a week (or a month) and see if we come up with any more ideas.
If you want a fight over adding an infobox, I'm sure we could find someone to accommodate you, but might I suggest postponing that until the 34th of Never? WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:46, 25 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
I thanked this message earlier, but am better placed to reply to it now. Yes -- the discussion is lower-intensity than it was, and I'm very happy with that fact. I'm happy to work this out over a long timeframe and figure out if there's some way everyone can come away not-completely-miserable-in-all-circumstances with the lead. I am, given the circumstances, not rushing to FAC. (Even before this I wanted Dark Archives done first, in case it can make it under the wire for Halloween TFA, and it's still waiting at GAN.) I try quite hard not to write articles that end up mistakenly called flashpoints of noticeboard trainwrecks and am upset about what became of the earlier discussion. But it happens, and sometimes you just gotta get back to it.
The last one seems like a good starting point. I'll iterate on it backstage and see if something good comes up. I'm concerned about the possibility of more disputes occurring in the meantime -- the article went back and forth died by-committed a couple times before it landed here in the first place. I guess I'd have to refer them here to "no, really, we are trying to find something, and for better or worse even if we don't we've definitely discussed this".
On a not-individual-articles level, I have a lot to say about wording disputes on disability-related-broadly-construed subjects, about the problems with standards set by usually abled/neurotypical authorities for assumed-abled/neurotypical audiences when discussing disability/neurodivergence, etc., some of which has been alluded to throughout these discussions and some in prior discussions about multiple relevant style questions. But an individual article's talk isn't the right place. Vaticidalprophet 11:56, 25 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
Introducing clearly problematic wording that is not used in the references is a POV violation. --Hipal (talk) 16:36, 8 August 2023 (UTC)Reply
This is not an answer to what I asked you to answer. Your preferred wording is 1. not in the sources and 2. has clearly problematic implications (IMO markedly moreso than the other wording being disputed). Vaticidalprophet 19:56, 8 August 2023 (UTC)Reply
(od) I wonder if we could discuss the made-up "mother" separately. The article presently says: "She claimed her mother was a French-Israeli Médecins Sans Frontières worker who died by suicide when Hingst was 16, and that her Gentile birth mother was her stepmother."
While the present dispute is about whether the fictional mother's fictional death should be described as "dying" or "committing", I'm also concerned that someone skimming through the article might not grasp the plotline here. Would this be improved by making it longer? For example:
"Since her real mother is not Jewish, Hingst invented a story about having a deceased Jewish mother. She claimed that this non-existent woman was a French-Israeli Médecins Sans Frontières worker. Hingst explained away the absence of this ficitional woman by claiming that her Jewish mother had killed herself when Hingst was 16, just as she explained away her living German birth mother by claiming that her real mother was her stepmother." WhatamIdoing (talk) 16:28, 9 August 2023 (UTC)Reply

Did she take an ancestry DNA test? edit

Did she ever do an ancestry DNA test? 50.45.51.222 (talk) 04:03, 3 August 2023 (UTC)Reply