On the tomboy
Aug. 6th, 2007 03:38 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
a rather interesting article on gender stereotyping in childhood
And what about children’s clothes? Strangely, until I started shopping with Miranda in tow, it had never struck me how absurd the clothes marketed at little girls are. We’d go into a shop like Gap or Next and Miranda would instantly turn to the boys’ section, and I’d realise that, in fact, most of the clothes she wanted were quite similar to the clothes I wear, and the clothes most adult women wear when they’re not in an office: jeans, T-shirts, trainers. What was really bizarre was the clothes in the girls’ section: all pink, fluffy waistcoats, ra-ra skirts and frilly, beaded tops. Lots of the little girls’ clothes were more like dressing-up gear than streetwear, and they certainly bore little resemblance to adult women’s clothing. In the book store, the conspiracy continues. Despite the fact that we are living through what is widely heralded as a golden age of children’s literature, tomboy heroines are depressingly thin on the ground. We are forced back to the Forties, into the pages of Enid Blyton, for a kindred literary spirit. George, one of the Famous Five, is really called Georgina, but she hates people calling her that and will only answer to George; she has her hair cut short, always wears trousers, and is brave and go-getting. Her cousins, when they are introduced to her, find her refreshingly different and rather exciting, and she remains the most interesting and exciting character throughout their many adventures.
Joanna Morehead, Times of London, Aug. 4 07