I'm on a Robotics team, and last year I was one of the few girls on the team. This year, when more girls joined, that made me really happy, because it meant that girls were getting over their whole thing with dirt. Well, it turns out that some of them do it to get at the guys, some joined for some bizarre reason, but are afraid to touch anything lest they get dirty, and some feel that they automatically have to take a marketing role, since they are female, which leaves me as STILL one of the most functional girls on the team. Not only that, but there's a lot of sexism on the mentor's part, since they won't let us *puny* girls lift anything heavy.
Then there's the shock my little cousin felt when she discovered that I don't know if I'll ever get married. Or the things people say about my mom (and sometimes about me, because I'm related to her) because her hair's often shorter than most guys', and she's an engineer who supports, alone, a fleet of 17-20 satellites.
So pastel legos? Great that they're marketing to girls, but since when did a girl become such a different person than a boy? Can't you market to children uniformly, since it's society that instills those images on them, or are we so depraved that we have made our girls and boys feel fundamentally different since birth?
Personally, I STILL won't get rid of my legos, but my parents would never let me get a barbie. I had a doll house for a while, before I gave it to my little BOY cousins. And I HATE pastel colors.
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Date: 2005-05-18 09:38 pm (UTC)I'm on a Robotics team, and last year I was one of the few girls on the team. This year, when more girls joined, that made me really happy, because it meant that girls were getting over their whole thing with dirt. Well, it turns out that some of them do it to get at the guys, some joined for some bizarre reason, but are afraid to touch anything lest they get dirty, and some feel that they automatically have to take a marketing role, since they are female, which leaves me as STILL one of the most functional girls on the team. Not only that, but there's a lot of sexism on the mentor's part, since they won't let us *puny* girls lift anything heavy.
Then there's the shock my little cousin felt when she discovered that I don't know if I'll ever get married. Or the things people say about my mom (and sometimes about me, because I'm related to her) because her hair's often shorter than most guys', and she's an engineer who supports, alone, a fleet of 17-20 satellites.
So pastel legos? Great that they're marketing to girls, but since when did a girl become such a different person than a boy? Can't you market to children uniformly, since it's society that instills those images on them, or are we so depraved that we have made our girls and boys feel fundamentally different since birth?
Personally, I STILL won't get rid of my legos, but my parents would never let me get a barbie. I had a doll house for a while, before I gave it to my little BOY cousins. And I HATE pastel colors.