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Given the community, I thought this might be of interest
An interesting article about male privilege in nerd-dom on Kotaku.com
I want to tell you a story.
A few years ago, I was dating a girl who was decidedly not nerd curious. She tolerated my geeky interests with a certain bemused air but definitely didn't participate in ‘em… not even setting foot inside a comic store on new comic day. She'd wait outside until I was done… which could be a while, since I was friends with several of the staff.
She came in the store exactly once, after I'd explained that no, it's a pretty friendly place… well lit, spacious, organized and with helpful – and clearly identified – staff members who were willing to bend over backwards to make sure their customers were satisfied.
She was in there for less than 4 minutes before one mouth-breathing troglodyte began alternately staring at her boobs – evidently hoping that x-ray vision could develop spontaneously – and berating her for daring to comment on the skimpy nature of the costumes – in this case, Lady Death and Witchblade. She fled the premises, never to return.
When both the manager and I explained to him in no uncertain terms as to what he did wrong he shrugged his shoulders. "Hey, I was just trying to help you guys! She couldn't understand that chicks can be tough and sexy! Not my fault she's a chauvinist," he said.
And that was when I shot him, your honor.
There's a deal of analysis after that, but I suspect the above might well ring a few bells of experiential recognition.And for legality, a little objectifying of the sort I enjoy
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All of my female friends love comics. All of them. But other than myself, only two regularly go to a comic book store and buy anything. A couple more buy the occasional trade from regular book stores. And part of that is trouble figuring out where to start with a series when it has 50 years of previous canon, but part of it is also hesitance to expose themselves to male-dominated fandom.
I can't think of a single woman in my group of friends who isn't a fan of at least one character to an extent that she'd want to read more, if it weren't for the misogyny in the writing, the art, the stores, etc.
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Not to mention existential horror.
Chaos! Comics still exists? Or has someone actually gone and bought the rights to Lady Death?
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As for the guy...you know, I do sometimes think that it is more of a shade of grey subject than either side wants to admit, but...yeah, that guy's there about the epitome of why we can't have nice things.
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Actually, I've never really been in a female-unfriendly comic book store. My three regular places were all pretty even-handed and not gross towards women. Just lucky, I guess.
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After reading the article and the comments, it's amazing/amusing/appalling how many commenters provided shining examples of exactly the problem he was posting about. Is there so little self-awareness out there?
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NEVER READ THE COMMENTS
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More often than not I've experienced this sort of bullshit in my own relationships with either my own geek male friends or ex-boyfriends. I had one male friend try to rebound/solicit sex to me because I shared his geeky interests and wanted to "recover" from an ex who didn't, and at worst my last ex treated me like a trophy rather than an actual person. After three months of that I dumped his ass.
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On the one hand, the actual writers are very cool. They have been posting a bunch of articles and opinion pieces discussing sexism and homophobia, and explaining in no uncertain terms why they are wrong and harmful.
On the other hand, a lot of commenters are asshats. Last time I checked an article about a obnoxious sexist joke (it was something like "if you don't know the name of this extremely popular videogame, you must be a woman!"), a couple of women had spent approximatively 30 seconds to post a few short comments where they dared to admit that the "women don't play videogames" stereotypes annoyed them, and a guy spent hours writing twenty or so longass comments mansplaining how GAWD IT'S JUST A JOKE WHY CAN'T YOU BE RELAZED LIKE ME I TOTALLY DON'T CARE THAT'S WHY I KEEP POSTING AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN TO SHOW HOW MUCH I DON'T CARE STUPID WOMEN WHO WHINE OVER A HARMLESS JOKE TOTALLY UNLIKE ME WHO CAN LET GO WHY CAN'T YOU BE RELAXED LIKE ME???!!!1111111
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...That's the kind of thing I've come to expect from the Kotaku comments.
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Online culture and comic books themselves though? Yeah, I've definitely felt alienated there. To tell the truth, there are very few (or no?) big-two titles that I can pick any random issue of and not feel vaguely insulted by on some level.
And at comic book sales, I've encountered some weird treatment - although to be honest most of it was of the "slightly too nice and eager to help" variety.
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I've been there twice. The first time, a random male customer followed me around the store giving helpful explanations ("See that guy there? That's Superman, he comes from another planet and he has all these powers...."), and wouldn't go away. The second time, the owner/manager greeted my breasts in a friendly manner, asking if this was their first visit and if he could help them with anything in particular. It was really irritating, so we (the three of us) took off. And have not been back. In nearly twenty years.
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I've also been to conventions for business and typically don't have too many problems except for guys asking for my phone number and trying to make it sound like something they need to do business with me.
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I also have to admit, that while I do think it as one of the best games I've ever played, his point about the gender representations in ARKHAM CITY was unfortunately accurate. My only complaint about the example would be that there was a female character much more crucial to the plot than Poison Ivy, but her clothing options, while slightly better, were still nothing to boast about.
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In my second LCS I was ogled, stared at and condescended the first time, the storekeeper kept on explaining to me who Daredevil was since I had glanced at an issue and asking if I was looking for stuff for my BF. I was so close to hitting him over the head but instead I went into a long discussion on the different writers/artists of DD and the film noir allusions and how I preferred the villains better in certain runs due psychological correctness. The second time I turned up there he was polite.
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*I went home with a pile of comics.
In the second store I didn't buy anything and justed ended up dissing his taste in DD.
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Many male nerds seem to think that being a nerd is that same thing, privilege-wise, as being a woman. Except, no, it's not even vaguely comparable.
Usually it beings with "I'm a feminist!" and then comes something incredibly sexist and male chauvinistic.
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I only tend to shop in that store, because I know it's friendly, and therefore 'safe', and one other where I know one of the girl's who works there, so same thing. I'd be hesitant about going into new shops because I wouldn't know what to expect, I totally self-censor to find the nice ones, but that does mean I haven'thad too many bad receptions.
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*slaps own face*
That's why, with such stereotypes ACTUALLY existing that you can't get enough people actively reading comics like in Japan or Belgium...