I really like this idea. It wouldn't even have to be a drawing -- you could use pictures of men and women editing, discussing and appearing in panels together at Wikimania and other wiki conferences/meetups.
- Nicole/Elocina
On Sun, Mar 20, 2011 at 6:02 PM, Andreas Kolbe jayen466@yahoo.com wrote:
--- On Sun, 20/3/11, carolmooredc@verizon.net carolmooredc@verizon.net wrote:
Come up with male and female wikipe-tans and put those up.
Thinking out loud here:
Having images that contain both a female and a male figure might actually be useful for young men, on a subliminal level.
Having the two figures drawn in similar ways makes it more difficult to objectify the image, because there would be a natural tendency for men to identify with the male image. It's harder psychologically to objectify and identify with an image at the same time. To the extent that the viewer identifies with the image, they then also identify with the female figure in the image somewhat; the message becomes one of sameness and shared characteristics.
I am obviously not talking about romantic depictions here. And it would help if the female figure weren't dressed like a maid. ;)
If it's well done, it might convey an implication of comradeship, and a reminder that this is a joint effort involving both sexes.
Wikipe-tan is pure objectification. For the male viewer, she is "other". The ones showing knickers and so on are in grossly poor taste. Males viewing those images are not encouraged to picture women working side by side with them, doing the same job they are doing. The whole vibe is of a boys-only environment, where the (falsely assumed) lack of actual female presence is compensated with a stereotypical fantasy girl. (That may also carry through into article illustration preferences sometimes.)
It's good for men to be aware that they are in mixed-gender company. As the study on collective intelligence posted by Joseph the other day suggested, social behaviour and group intelligence generally tend to improve somewhat.
Andreas