1-small Computer Engineering Barbie Followup

(Welcome, Skepchick readers and new members! You may want to browse some of the administrivia posts to learn more about the site.)

barbie

Mamealoney posted about Computer Engineering Barbie earlier, and now she’s real!

Of course, like any news item about women and technology, the launch of Computer Engineering Barbie has set off a flurry of hand-wringing about how there must be something wrong with this. In this case, it’s the idea that this Barbie is too femme to be a geek — if she’s wearing pink and has long hair, she can’t be a “real coder”.

Wired’s Geek Dad blog posts a tongue-in-cheek “5 Ideas to Make Computer Engineer Barbie Realistic” (because, of course, she doesn’t look realistic as is), and one of the first commenters reposts a tweet that “If new Barbie was a real coder, she would be wearing a Three Wolf Moon t-shirt.”1 Another Wired blog, GadgetLab, elicits the wonderful comment “News flash, they put the hot chicks in front desk answering the phone, or they have them on the sales staff. The hot ones or even remotely attractive ones never work in IT/IS.” (Eww! Maybe consider comment moderation, Wired?) And a woman quoted in the BBC’s article about the doll describes Barbie’s hairstyle as “really impractical… you [would] spend half the time pulling it back from your face.”

There have been a lot of great discussions about this on some of the mailing lists I’m on (the LinuxChix, DevChix, and Systers mailing lists are great, if you’re not already on them!), and someone there made the key point: if a geeky woman presents as femme/takes care in her appearance/is attractive, she’s considered not much of a geek, but if she doesn’t care about her appearance, she’s considered not much of a woman. You can’t win.

In my opinion, Computer Engineering Barbie is great, and it’s ridiculous to say that her “girly” presentation makes her unrealistic as a geek. Real geeks come in all shapes, sizes, genders, colors, levels of attractiveness, and styles of dress — it’s what you do and how you think that makes you geeky, not what you wear. Asserting that “real coders” don’t care about their appearance is just one more in the barrage of cultural memes that pigeonhole programmers into one narrow stereotype — it’s bad for coders (who may or may not fit the stereotype), it’s bad for potential coders (who decide not to go into programming because they don’t fit the stereotype), and it’s bad for everyone who benefits from computer technology (which could be even better if so many people weren’t turned away from the field by this stupid idea).

This is part of why Ada Lovelace Day is so needed — as last year’s many posts showed, when you’re actually profiling real women in technology and not some imagined stereotype, you can see that “geek vs. femme” (or “geek vs. woman”, or “geek vs. [anything else]”) is a pretty pointless distinction. (And I hope you’ll join us this year and help us showcase the vast diversity of women in science/tech we have right here on Stemming!)

1. not that there’s anything wrong with a three wolf moon t-shirt!

Comments

Create a free account to comment on this post!

103-small

at 7:24PM 02/17/10 BlueFrog said:

I am okay with this Barbie too. Just because you are geeky doesn’t limit feminity. My daughter loves bugs and dinosaurs more than anything, but wears pink from head to toe. She will be a smart, tough, and beautiful scientist!

85-small

at 7:26PM 02/17/10 Chasmosaur said:

Oh c’mon. Does anyone actually expect Mattel to come out with realistic Barbie occupations?

My biggest beef wasn’t the pink or the hair or the really unrealistic equipment on the Paleontologist Barbie:

http://www.dollgenie.com/p/1996-Paleontologist.jpg

It was the lack of realistic tan lines. You know, from wearing shirts with varying necklines and sleeve lengths, shorts and pants of varying length, industrial knee pads for kneeling in bone beds, and high-ankled boots with socks to prevent snake bite (and only putting on sandals once back at camp and the sun was too low to get good rays).

I had zebra stripes on my legs and wore opaque tights if I was wearing skirts on my off days so people wouldn’t stare. Mattel missed that part entirely.

80-small

at 7:51PM 02/17/10 jenmyers said:

I also really like the computer engineer Barbie, and I’m so pleased to see so many other tech women excited about it, too – especially those who aren’t even into girly things. It proves that EVERYONE wants to see the stereotype open up. Very encouraging. :)

1-small

at 8:01PM 02/17/10 clara said:

Maybe Paleontologist Barbie is supposed to have access to super-duper extra-powerful never-fail sunscreen? ;)

79-small

at 11:13PM 02/17/10 Lola said:

I hate it when people assume that “geek” and “feminine” are mutually exclusive. I think that this mentality is driving lots of talented women away from careers in STEM fields because they don’t feel like they fit in with the stereotypes.

I can speak to this phenomenon from firsthand experience. I’ve always loved math AND wearing dresses and heels. It took me many years before I could imagine myself becoming a mathematician – even while I was majoring in the subject in college – just because I felt that I didn’t fit in with the culture. I actually spent a full year of college wearing nothing but jeans and dorky math T-shirts just because I wanted to feel accepted by my classmates. Now, I’m thankfully back to being myself, a stiletto-wearing math PhD student. A lot of people tell me that I don’t “look like a mathematician” but I try to take it at face value (it’s true that I don’t look like most mathematicians!) rather than reading into it as a judgment of my intellect.

I have to imagine that there are others like me – women who love science but are driven away from it because they don’t look the part. I’m hoping that having some feminine science-oriented role models – like Computer Engineer Barbie – will help more women realize that they, too, can be scientists.

228-small

at 3:44AM 04/28/10 Carol C said:

There is nothing wrong with a pink loving, heel wearing, science/math/tech women.

Log In



 

Join Us










What comes next? 'Monday Tuesday Wednesday ?????'

By submitting this form, you agree to the site's terms of use and confirm that you are at least 13 years old.

Search Us

Promote & Share

RSS delicious facebook twittter stumbleupon

Follow us on Facebook