One of the things that is guaranteed to piss me off is when people continue the archaic notion of boys being blue and certain toys while girls are pink and different toys. This video really goes into the history of how blue and pink even came about...corporate marketing which shouldn't be a surprise to anyone. I highly recommend it. Also, I love you Toys'r'us of Europe, THAT's how you should market toys! I wish they'd do that here.
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=50137957n
Just the other day, a coworker was complaining about pink shirts in the boys' section and when I bought up that boys used to be clothed in dresses routinely until they were four or so...she shook her vehemently and went, "NOPE!"
How less messed up would our country be with issues of gender, male insecurity and lgbtq if it weren't for this shit?
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=50137957n
Just the other day, a coworker was complaining about pink shirts in the boys' section and when I bought up that boys used to be clothed in dresses routinely until they were four or so...she shook her vehemently and went, "NOPE!"
How less messed up would our country be with issues of gender, male insecurity and lgbtq if it weren't for this shit?
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Date: 2013-01-11 03:07 am (UTC)Pretty much we use, whether it's the colors we wear, the computers we use or the politics we believe in have been carefully designed for us.
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Date: 2013-01-11 03:13 am (UTC)Personally I think a color is just a color. A lady is just a lady. As far as toys go, have you heard of GoldieBlox?
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Date: 2013-01-11 03:56 am (UTC)*One of my main outdoor toys, carefully moved between houses and used until it became completely unsafe (10 years in all weather in Michigan), was something like this. I also chipped a tooth on a trapeze bar. I had lots of stuffed animals, and a couple of dolls in the mix, but the main doll wore a blue dress and had achievable bodily proportions. *g* I played with Tinkertoys (back when some pieces were wood), and had one or two wooden farm sets. Later, little plastic horse models and barns for them made me excited. I also had a make-believe horse farm and wrote up episodes for what was probably Star Trek fanfiction even though it was set it a slightly different universe. ...OK, I'm done. I'm also not sure when I realized what Barbie dolls were. I was too busy with my other toys.
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Date: 2013-01-11 04:09 am (UTC)I loved me my full Voltron lion set like woah, and he loved his Barbie doll. Does it matter?
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Date: 2013-01-11 07:26 am (UTC)You are right about that - I think that a color should just be a color.
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Date: 2013-01-11 07:50 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-01-11 08:28 am (UTC)I guess I was lucky in that my mom didn't like pink as a color so I was dressed mostly in blue, yellow, orange, and green. I find this notion of pink only for girls and women ridiculous. Luckily it's not quiet as extreme in Germany as it seems to be in the US. I've had co-workers who wore pink or even fuchsia shirts with their suits and no-one assumed that they were gay. Fuchsia shirt and a charcoal grey suit is a stunning combinationon some men. Unfortunately the boss who wore that was also someone who sexually harassed female co-workers or a regular basis.
It's also interesting how they split the colors because in medieval times blue was the color of the Virgin Mary and thus linked to feminin virtues while red was the color of blood, war, and anger and thus linked to me. And in extension little blue (light blue) for girls and little red (pink) for boys.
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Date: 2013-01-11 04:34 pm (UTC)Source: 5 gender stereotypes that used to be the exact opposite (http://www.cracked.com/article_19780_5-gender-stereotypes-that-used-to-be-exact-opposite.html).
no subject
Date: 2013-01-11 10:53 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-01-12 12:57 am (UTC)