SIGIA-L Mail Archives Subscribe/Unsubscribe | Home


Printer-Friendly Version


SIGIA-L Mail Archives: Re: [Sigia-l] Pink, revisited

Re: [Sigia-l] Pink, revisited

From: Noni Oldfield (Noni.Oldfield_at_ird.govt.nz)
Date: Thu Sep 13 2007 - 20:12:56 EDT


We've just had a "Leonardo da Vinci" machines exhibition
locally.
 
Best known for being an artist but he actually only completed 15
paintings in his lifetime and his day job was being an
engineer/designer. His favourite colour, reportedly, was pink and
he almost always wore that.
 
Perhaps pink should be associated with brilliant design, rather
than the feminine gender?
 
;-)
 
Noni
 
Noni Oldfield
Information Architect - Taxonomy / Metadata
Records & Document Management Team
Inland Revenue Te Tari Taake
National Office 12-22 Hawkestone St
PO Box 2198
WELLINGTON
Phone +64 4 890 1500
ext 88952
DDI +64 4 890 2952
Fax +64 4 890 4554
Email Noni.Oldfield_at_ird.govt.nz
Web www.ird.govt.nz

>>> Paola Kathuria <paola_at_limov.com> 14/09/2007 8:18:41 a.m.
>>>

Frank Shepard wrote:
> ""...the generally accepted rule is pink for the boy and blue
for the
> girl. The reason is that pink being a more decided and
stronger color
> is more suitable for the boy, while blue, which is more
delicate and
> dainty, is pertier for the girl." [Ladies Home Journal, June,
1918]"

I found this quote too but its authenticity had been
questioned at two different places:

  http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=238733
  (see the second comment)

  http://www.songdog.net/blog/archives/000994.html#comment-640

I'm sure that gender-specific colours are as a result
of cultural socialisation and not innate.

My very boyish 7yr old neighbour, rides his bike and
plays football, says that his favourite colour is pink.
I see his 13yr old brother scoff when he hears this
and I am sure that once the younger brother gets a bit
older, peer pressure will switch him to blue because
boys are, ultimately, seen as superior.

I don't think that people like to admit (or even accept)
that they are affected by the constant bombarded of
gender-role conditioning (and advertising). Men now get
their own soaps, hairspray, skin cream, all packaged
in blue, red or black. It's just a way of selling twice
as much stuff.

Just say no.

Paola

--
http://www.paolability.com/
------------
IA Summit 2008: "Experiencing Information" 
April 10-14, 2008, Miami, Florida
-----
When replying, please *trim your post* as much as possible.
*Plain text, please; NO Attachments
Searchable Archive at http://www.info-arch.org/lists/sigia-l/
________________________________________
Sigia-l mailing list -- post to: Sigia-l_at_asis.org
Changes to subscription:
http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/sigia-l
------------
IA Summit 2008: "Experiencing Information" 
April 10-14, 2008, Miami, Florida
-----
When replying, please *trim your post* as much as possible.
*Plain text, please; NO Attachments
Searchable Archive at http://www.info-arch.org/lists/sigia-l/
________________________________________
Sigia-l mailing list -- post to: Sigia-l_at_asis.org
Changes to subscription: http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/sigia-l


This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.6 : Thu Sep 13 2007 - 21:47:38 EDT

 


www.info-arch.org
| www.asis.org/SIG/SIGIA

Subscribe/Unsubscribe | Home