Posted August 11, 2013
Vestin: .
As another anecdote - my ex-roommate's attractiveness at a party went from "kinda ugly" to "center of attention" once she mentioned playing Starcraft... No definite info on how drunk everyone involved was, but (as far as I've heard) the reactions were unanimously positive.
Hell - maybe it has something to do with the iron curtain?
On the other hand - "cultural universals", I've heard, are a dirty word...
Meanwhile: Jenny Haniver.
Safety can be a lot of things, a lot of places, and in some places it's only a perception. In this particular instance, the girl is talking to 2 friends about Gothic on a college campus. In her mind at least, she was in a place where who she was and what she was doing was ok. What if that scenario had ended differently? What if someone (male or female, doesn't matter) had approached her and belittled her for a hobby she loves, then told her she was a waste of space and needs to get a husband and children to make her life "worth living"? Regardless of her immediate response, I bet you that conversation out in the open would never happen again... gamefreak1972: ...keep in mind she was in a "safe" place, talking to friends, not waxing poetic online about her love for Gothic.
Vestin: I kept thinking about this... What WOULD be an unsafe place? Is it only the Internet? Who would the hostility be coming from - other women or men? As another anecdote - my ex-roommate's attractiveness at a party went from "kinda ugly" to "center of attention" once she mentioned playing Starcraft... No definite info on how drunk everyone involved was, but (as far as I've heard) the reactions were unanimously positive.
Hell - maybe it has something to do with the iron curtain?
StingingVelvet: Though honestly even that is a question, isn't it? Once you accept gender roles are social constructs you begin to debate when that is bad and when it is good.
Vestin: Unless one falls into depths of "anthropological relativism", at which point there is no longer any overarching "good" or "bad", and if a given society is into some particular form of mutilation or persecution, that's just "the way they are" and it would be unjust to try and deprive them of their heritage ;P. On the other hand - "cultural universals", I've heard, are a dirty word...
Meanwhile: Jenny Haniver.
Interesting response to your ex roommate, it would have been interesting to see anyway. If I had to guess, I would bet that she isn't bad looking at all, perhaps average, but perhaps socially awkward. Talking about something you are enthusiastic about changes a lot of people's perceptions of in an instant - I think we've all seen it where someone talks about something or someone they love and their face just "lights up" - and like magic they are more interesting, more attractive.
Women can be just as hostile as men can, even towards other women. I remember woman being very upset with her daughter for being employed as a security guard, because "1) she's keeping a man from having that job and being able to support his family", and 2) "Women just don't have jobs like that!" It didn't matter that the daughter was good at what she did (she was her universities first female security guard), or that she was happy at that job; it was all irrelevant in the face of "women shouldn't DO that!" Would all women be happy in that job, or feel safe walking a college campus at night? No, but this one wanted to do it, and was good at it, stereotypes be damned. Gender roles may be a social construct, but does that make them RIGHT?