Why are you concentrating on texts that conform to your world view ? If you want to be academically rigorous (and as a by product high grading) you should be studying critiques and sources from as wide a range of positions as possible
- but that opinion is informed by how they behave not their gender (or indeed, race, sexuality, political leanings, fitness etc)
Fitness?
I'm familiar with prejudice/bias based on the other factors you mention, but fitness?
Fitness?
I'm familiar with prejudice/bias based on the other factors you mention, but fitness?
To be frank this
Why are you concentrating on texts that conform to your world view ? If you want to be academically rigorous (and as a by product high grading) you should be studying critiques and sources from as wide a range of positions as possible , regardless of whether you agree with them or not.
For example I woud charecterise my political leaning as moderately centre right , but when I was working on Poli Sci units of my masters I read and drew quotes from a wide range of texts from Das Capital to Mein Kampf and assorted in between the better to understand and analyse the positions people have taken and the reasons behind them.
It is of course harder to read something that expresses views you find ridiculous or abhorrent, but credibity of analysis is not established by listening only to preaching to the choir.
^^THIS
Even if you want to prove a feminist theory or write a dissertation that attempts to prove one, it will be more academically robust if you present a balanced argument and present evidence from opposing theorists. To merely cite from those who agree with you is to merely use other people's research to put a spin on a subject. If ou present a balanced argument and the research genuinely backs up your opinion, then not only does your conclusion write itself, but you will receive much higher grades for being thorough, ethical and rigorous.
To me the argument that "women arent taken seriously" [on photo sites] smacks of "you is only saying that cos I is black" i.e that its a convenient excuse for not behaving in a way that merits being taken seriously to say "you don't take me seriously because I'm a woman"
I wonder if your friend just read too much into what was said? Remarks like that are usually said innocently, in the belief that a gender-based opinion may have particular relevance. All your friend has to do is politely assert that she is giving a personal opinion rather than one which should be viewed as exclusively feminine. It is not something I would take personally, if it were me. Nor does it mean that the man asking the question necessarily thinks any less of her.
People can be discriminated against because of their weight, or their state of health. Disability discrimination would fall under that as well. ie 'fit' for a particular task.
I take it you weren't that fat spotty kid who always got picked last during PE ? - all sorts of things can lead to bias or discrimination , looks , hair colour , height, weight, academic prowess - the list is endless
As a disabled person I resent and totally reject any link between fitness and disability. I'm sure its not what you meant but my disability has nothing to do with fitness levels or weight or cholesterol or any other fitness indicator you may choose to use. I dislike the implication that by linking disability to fitness that the disabled person can somehow improve their disability by getting fitter. Not having a go at you Lindsay, as I'm sure from reading your posts that you don't mean that. Just feel I need to emphasise that in case anyone else reading this thread makes a different link.
She didn't say that. Being 'fit' for purpose is not the same as being physically 'fit'.
A personal in a wheelchair, for example, is not fit to stack high shelves in a supermarket without additional help. However that does not mean that they couldn't win a wheelchair marathon.
Well the post was specifically about my question of the word fitness, and in reply Lindsay mentioned Disability discrimination. Being unfit is not a disability. It can be a as a result of an underlying disability and in due course it can cause a disability. But the Disability Discrimination Act does not cover an able bodied person who happens to be overweight so there is no need to mention the DDA in response to a question about fitness.
Yes absolutely, I think it's more than possible to read 'too much' into it, but rather I'm questioning the culture that makes those remarks so easy to say, and why we do not say similar things towards men.
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But you know, mostly because it's my personal blog. And I like blogging about things that are relevant to my life. This was relevant to my life in the same way that I blogged about some Vortographs that I liked. Or the costume I made last week. Or the events I photographed last year. It's a *personal* blog.
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Of course it doesn't help that recently I've been devouring feminist critiques of imagery and educational texts as I prepared to study gender image within self-portraiture next year
I'm not saying what women aren't taken seriously, but rather their opinions can be treated like they're a mass entity. That individualism is lost to some extent when you're a female in a male dominated arena. You become 'the woman' rather than 'another person'.
I am fully aware of being the last kid picked at school but you were talking specifically about bias/prejudice against people's opinions. I am fully aware that other forms of discrimination may take place, but I was voicing surprise that anyone would react to the fitness of a person in assessing the validity of their opinion. Cant say I've ever seen that happen.
And again with the generalisations - do you know for a fact that such things aren't said to men ? - in fact many men will report being asked for a male opinion regularly , i know I am - just as people regular position other gender stereotypes toward men - 'all men' love the footie, know about cars, are sexist pigs etc .
memes like this are common
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but men are expected to take it on the chin and laugh along (as a lot of guys do - but that still doesnt make gener stereotuyping aceptable) ,
but the comment you made was that you'd be devouring those texts in preperation for your disserttaion - not for a personal blog - that was what i was saying about the lack of academic rigour.
My key point was that i only judge peoples photography on photographic merit and form opinions of their credibility based of their conduct, not other factors. I mentioned fitness because one of my best freinds on here is extremly overweight so it was an example that sprung to mind, I no more treat him differently because he's unfit than I treat Lindsay different because she's female , or TBY differently because he looks like a wookie (his description)
And I'm entirely sure that if this was a paper that I was handing it, I would have done more than empirical research. However, whichever way you look at it, it was just a blog. A blog with endnotes, but still just fundamentally my opinion. Or rather, mostly my friends opinion. I just thought it might provoke interesting discussion, which it has.
I think people are reading a little too much into it. I like to write about photography more than I like to take photographs. Therefore on a photography site I'm more likely to say 'what do you think of my writing on photography' than 'what do you think of my photograph'. I know it's unusual, but it's not unheard of.
- I believe that the nuclear family has damaged 'men' as much as 'women'.
I've never examined such a thing but at least we know how you spend some of your free time.Sounds like the mumbo-jumbo you see on feminist tumblr sites.
Photography can't exist outside social and cultural contexts. Thus they are relevant.... what is the purpose of dissertations in soft subjects like photography?
Steve, Charlotte's assessment of what I meant is correct. I wanted to point out the very real discrimination that so many disabled people face (I have two disabled family members and I suffer from a disability myself, albeit a very mild one by comparison). When I use the word fitness I am not referring to whether someone can run a marathon, push weights etc. I am referring to whether or not a person is physically able to perform certain tasks, and the discrimination which can arise when they cannot.
I am sorry if I offended you, that would never be my intention.
Oh.Not certain you people are serious but I'll bite - Two parents (normally man + woman) plus their kids.
- I believe that the nuclear family has damaged 'men' as much as 'women'..
Because the reinforces gender stereotypes. Or at least creates fertile ground for them to thrive.Re: Nuclear Family
Oh.
I only asked what's a "nuclear family" because I thought it couldn't possibly mean a man, woman and children if this is a view of it ;
Last year I had an unexpected conversation with another local resident. She was talking about someone she knew, and their lifestyle, and I made some comments to support the person under discussion. It turned out that the person I was chatting to had a scathing (if not brutal) opinion of women who go back to work after having a family. She is also appalled by women who choose not to go down the marriage and children route (and she thought nothing of telling me how selfish I am for falling into that category, even though she knows nothing about my background). I think most of us know that these days a household cannot necessarily survive on the man's wage alone, and we also have to acknowledge that women have the right to pursue a stimulating or rewarding career.
I will say at this point that the person spouting these views was female, and almost without exception when I hear this kind of thing it is another woman coming out with it. A man would never be criticised for going to work every day after having a family, but women are often vilified, we are still seen as almost wholly responsible for domestic duties and child rearing and we are condemned if we don't conform to that. This is why so many women are riddled with guilt when they can't (or don't want to) spend all of their time at home with the kids.
Last year I had an unexpected conversation with another local resident. She was talking about someone she knew, and their lifestyle, and I made some comments to support the person under discussion. It turned out that the person I was chatting to had a scathing (if not brutal) opinion of women who go back to work after having a family. She is also appalled by women who choose not to go down the marriage and children route (and she thought nothing of telling me how selfish I am for falling into that category, even though she knows nothing about my background). I think most of us know that these days a household cannot necessarily survive on the man's wage alone, and we also have to acknowledge that women have the right to pursue a stimulating or rewarding career.
I will say at this point that the person spouting these views was female, and almost without exception when I hear this kind of thing it is another woman coming out with it. A man would never be criticised for going to work every day after having a family, but women are often vilified, we are still seen as almost wholly responsible for domestic duties and child rearing and we are condemned if we don't conform to that. This is why so many women are riddled with guilt when they can't (or don't want to) spend all of their time at home with the kids.
I often ask for a female point of view, why because I am not stupid enough to believe that I always understand what a woman may place value on and there again I ask many people for their opinion as a customer, both male and female as I am not a customer but the provider and then I ask young people for their opinion as I am no longer a young person.
It is unfortunate, but I also know a few people who hold these or very similar views. The common link with the people I know is education, they just don't have a lot of it - I'm not just talking grades/qualifications. They just aren't interested if it doesn't involve them, so they just don't absorb what's going on in the world, unless its named; big brother, celebrity, or TOWIE...
Because the reinforces gender stereotypes. Or at least creates fertile ground for them to thrive.
The nuclear family, independent of the extended family, has the problem of childcare and household maintenance. And that has traditionally meant the male as worker/breadwinner and the female as childcarer/homemaker.