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Monday, November 16. 20097634Trackbacks
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I had to buy a set of female lego minifigs from some collector in the US, because Rebecca had noticed that all the little people she had were men. At the time, Lego had, quite literally, no female minifigs in the lines on sale. They’ve pulled their head back in a bit in the last 18 months or so - you can now get a number of sets with little women in. This is in tandem with a return to the more freeform, less vacuum-formed sets that you note. Ada simply declared her tractor driver a woman. It’s probably not meant to be, but in the absence of any obvious male-gender markers like facial hair (now apparently mandatory for police figures) I see no reason to disagree. That’s a good point. Absent any caricature gender characteristics (lipstick, long hair, etc) why do we assume they’re male? I tried to convince Rebecca of this but she didn’t go for it - so we got some Lego figures that did have the stereotypically female traits. It’s like that point that Alison Bechdel makes about how in many comics, the default character is male, and female characters are differentiated by putting things onto them (long eyelashes, lipstick, red high heels, etc). |
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