If you take a close look at the stick figures in your life, you’ll notice that the “generic” stick figure is actually a great example of the way many of our societies center the male (as in, it’s generic insofar as the male is the generic human and women are, well, women). That’s why the bathroom symbol for “men’s” is the same one you see virtually everywhere representing “person.” Unless, of course, children or cleaning are involved and then they weirdly sprout skirts.
Today our Facebook friend Tamar G. sent us one we couldn’t resist sharing. It’s a playground sign from Goettigen, Germany featuring an adult and child. As is common, the adult has been carefully altered to be identifiable as female because the sign is in reference to caretaking kids. Someone in Goettigen found this as annoying as we do, however, and scribbled upon the sign: “Daddy, I also want to wear a skirt.” What a fabulous way to fight back against rigid gender rules.
Lisa Wade, PhD is an Associate Professor at Tulane University. She is the author of American Hookup, a book about college sexual culture; a textbook about gender; and a forthcoming introductory text: Terrible Magnificent Sociology. You can follow her on Twitter and Instagram.
Comments 29
Japaniard — August 5, 2013
If you want to know why stick figures sprout skirts whenever they are accompanying children, it is because in much of the western world people are uncomfortable depictions of grown men alone with small children, as they immediately assume that the grown man is a pedophile
Tobi — August 5, 2013
That one is not a playground sign. It indicates a sidewalk for pedestrian use only. Source: http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gehweg#Radfahren_auf_Gehwegen
DireSloth — August 5, 2013
This is a pretty neat find, cool on whoever wrote it.
I can't wait for all the comments going "how dare you support the destruction of public property breaking restrictive gender rolls is all right i guess but graffiti makes you worse than double hitler" or "why would you make a post about something as trivial as this and you call yourself a professor i demand my money back" or "are you sure the designers of these signs were reinforcing gender roles maybe all the signs were changed by space aliens in order to derail internet conversations why dont you write a post about that"
pduggie — August 6, 2013
If I can't perform gender in a way that is recognizable by the majority of my culture, can I really perform gender?
medimus — August 6, 2013
The other day I saw one of these types of signs where the grown up wasn't wearing a skirt. I immediatly thought of this blog, but didn't have a camera on me to take a picture. Now I can't for the life of me remember where it was.
Kion — August 6, 2013
I think it's interesting that until 1971 the person was a man, not even a generic stick figure:
http://de.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Datei:Historisches_Fussgaengerzeichen.svg&filetimestamp=20110914111152&
Marie — August 6, 2013
When I saw this, I couldn't help but wonder if that bit of graffiti wasn't meant to mock the supporters of German father Nils Pickert whose story about supporting his son's clothing choices by wearing skirts went viral http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/29/nils-pickert-german-dad_n_1840290.html. It doesn't appear to have occurred in the same part of Germany, and I don't speak German, so I don't know whether it would be clear whether the comment was meant to question gender rules or mock those who do. Just another possible interpretation.
Gender and Stick Figures | Gender, Sex, Society | Hunter College — August 7, 2013
[...] Here’s a short article from a popular sociology blog that I thought you might enjoy. [...]
Amy — August 8, 2013
I saw a lot of those other signs--man in a hat with a little girl--in the Czech Republic just this summer. Here is the link again: http://de.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Datei:Historisches_Fussgaengerzeichen.svg&filetimestamp=20110914111152&
Nicolas Holzheu — August 8, 2013
Small correction this is just a pedestrians-only sign and has nothing todo with playgrounds. (You can find the same defacements in Munich 400kms away)
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