Marnie. I did not write the quoted part, Bob did.
Blame him, not me ;-)

Tim
Mostly harmless (just plain Norwegian)
 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 22. oktober 2006 18:02
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Your first camera

In a message dated 10/22/2006 8:43:53 AM Pacific Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
it is a truism* that historically most artists, sculptors etc. are
also men, and men are supposedly more visually-oriented than women. So
a non-gearhead explanation could be that men are more likely to want
to go out and take pictures.
======
Phsaw, phooey, and crap. Double crap.

Culturally over the centuries women were held back from becoming artists, 
etc. Had to have babies and feed the male hordes, including male artists and

sculptors, etc. Their place was in the home, they had smaller brains, they
were 
illogical, all emotional, couldn't manage complicated tasks, understand 
technical things, etc. For instance, I grew up when there were no women news
anchors 
on TV, and the most available jobs for women were: teacher, teller, 
stewardress, nurse, and social worker -- the helper fields. It hasn't been
all that long 
since gender prejudices were socially acceptable and active. And in some 
instances still are, although women have made a lot of progress since the
1960's. 
And I am still only talking about Western cultures, since those prejudices
are 
still quite active, barring women from jobs, in other cultures.

So now that Western women are supposedly "liberated" and supposedly can hold

any job, get back to me in another 200-1,000 years and see if those 
artist/photographer percentages haven't changed.

If you want you daughters to grow up enjoying photography, hand them a
camera 
young.

As a female programmer, a very small minority in that field in my age group,

I am pretty familiar with gender stereotypes and unconscious assumptions and

prejudices. 

Arts and Crafts, quilting, needlepoint, lace making, sewing, etc. were 
socially acceptable visual fields for women for centuries. They couldn't
lift a 
brush, not appropriate for most past eras and places, but, boy, they were
allowed 
to lift a needle.

Have a Nice Day!, Marnie aka Doe 

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