History of Feminism
Related: About this forum(Because Blondes!) Actual words people say to a blonde woman studying engineering at MIT
[Hint: Im not.]
Many MIT students recount questions about their GPA, test scores, magnificent things theyve built, accomplishments, etc.
While I often find myself trying to convince people that I actually attend MIT.
The reactions that Ive received from people range from amusing to borderline offensive, from disheartening to downright what.
Heres a collection of reactions in all their confusing glory.
On MIT campus
Im sitting on a bench off the Infinite Corridor conversing with my best friend. A friend of hers approaches us. Cue introduction.
Hi! Where do you go to school?
Im wearing a MIT jacket. My backpack lies beside me. Were in MITs academic buildings.
Im a student here. At MIT.
Really?
more at link:
http://qz.com/322045/im-a-blonde-woman-engineering-student-at-mit-heres-what-people-say-to-me/
niyad
(119,559 posts)hollysmom
(5,946 posts)all the women in that picture are bottle blondes. I was a real one.
Tuesday Afternoon
(56,912 posts)MannyGoldstein
(34,589 posts)at a top-tier university. A knockout, with an IQ 15 points higher than mine.
Very intimidating!
We married.
seabeyond
(110,159 posts)what does that say about us as a society.
MannyGoldstein
(34,589 posts)In fact, living local to MIT and having regular interactions with them, I'm surprised by the article. But it is what it is.
A few months ago I was on campus with our son, he was taking a course there, and I pointed out how many women MIT has enrolled today, a far cry from decades ago; I just assumed they were MIT students and very smart.
LuvLoogie
(7,526 posts)Deneuve
LuvLoogie
(7,526 posts)seabeyond
(110,159 posts)blonde? or we need you to throw up pictures of bilf
LuvLoogie
(7,526 posts)That's all.
seabeyond
(110,159 posts)LuvLoogie
(7,526 posts)College-aged men are college-aged men even if they are engineers. They hit on her, but I don't think they assaulted her. It's not clear, but some of the comments she gets are likely from other women, perhaps other women MIT students. But not necessarily because she is blonde. Although bright blonde hair is like a beacon, indoors and out.
Cute is cute. At MIT, the library, the grocery store, traffic court, Starbucks. I think the blonde archetype developed out of the silver screen because the hair just glowed in black and white with the right lighting and filters. The way it reflects and contrasts with everything else.
That is what this young woman is contending with. Decades of idolization, jealousy and scorn.
Sometimes people look good just by taking a shower and brushing their teeth and hair. Others take more effort than that, not because they need to, but because it makes them feel good or secure. That's all.
LanternWaste
(37,748 posts)And the relevance of your loves to this topic is exactly what?
LuvLoogie
(7,526 posts)All else is irrelevant?
People assume a lot upon first meeting. College-aged men are still college-aged men, even engineering students.
LanternWaste
(37,748 posts)We all illustrate our biases in way or another... it believe it may have been relevant to the OP had they been pictures of...
Grace Hopper, Computer Scientist
Dr. Elizabeth Blackburn, prof of Biochemistry and Biophysics
Ameia Earhart, Pilot and Explorer.
Yet simply asking you the relevance in no ways implies "All else is irrelevant?"-- so yes, 'people do assume a lot..."
LuvLoogie
(7,526 posts)for a picture of Liz Warren when you posted. But I catch your drift. What I mean by all else is irrelevant is that some times people see a cute blonde that they are attracted too, and all else becomes irrelevant. That's true in any setting, especially among teenagers and twenty-somethings.
ismnotwasm
(42,436 posts)Random guy at Starbucks
What are you working on?
Im writing an international relations paper on global politics.
Cool! Are you studying to be a lawyer? Where do you go to school?
No, actually Im studying engineering at MIT.
Oh! So youre like genius? But you seem so down to earth! Did you have some traumatizing childhood experience that brought you down to earth?
How is that relevant?
Notice how many of the comments are sexual harassment?
cwydro
(51,308 posts)This article is amazing. (not in a good way)
pnwmom
(109,501 posts)When my daughter was there, she said there was only one other redhead she'd ever seen -- a guy. Mostly, MIT is a sea of dark brunettes -- but her roommate was a blonde.
When tour buses from Asia came through campus, they often stopped my daughter to ask for a photo.
Lucky Luciano
(11,406 posts)When I answered the standard "what do you do?" question in LA, everyone was always surprised. They would say, "but you don't look like a math grad student?!" I would then laugh and say "Thank You!" Often people mistook me for being connected to the entertainment industry somehow when I was light years from it. I didn't fit the stereotype and it surprised people. Happens to men and women that don't fit stereotypes I guess - though I did like that it surprised people admittedly.