jack: (Default)
[personal profile] jack
I've been playing a lot of draw something[1] and this has led to drawing lots of stick figures.

And I realise that I fell into the traditional trap of using an unadorned stick-figure for for a generic person, but also for "man", and using a stick figure with a skirt for "woman", because those are the most recognisable.

And I really don't like doing that. What SHOULD I do?

One thing is to find some way of indicating "male stick figure", even if it's still gender-stereotypical, eg a hat. That way, at least I'm not contributing to the assumption that generic stick figures are men, even if I'm not fighting it.

Another would be always draw a stick figure with a gender marker, so at least I send a message of "stick-figure world contains people of all genders". But in some ways that makes it worse, making it look as if (a) gender were important for stick figures and (b) there were only two genders of stick-figures.

Probably the best would be to draw stick figures with a coloured rectangle instead of a line for a body, because that way you can vary the drawing a bit without being ostentatious about it. But I'm worried that it stretches my art skills too far :)

Is there a "right" way of drawing stick figures?

I also find it difficult to draw vikings without drawing helmets with horns on them, but I'm sure most people I know know the truth of the viking helmets, so I'm not perpetuating misinformation (and even if I am, it probably doesn't matter as much).

[1] As "cartesiandaemon". Anyone else want to play, tell me your username!

Date: 2013-07-03 09:48 am (UTC)
liv: Composite image of Han Solo and Princess Leia, labelled Hen Solo (gender)
From: [personal profile] liv
Using non-binary symbols is a good idea! The issue is that this is a Zynga game; they quite often ask you to draw "fireman" or "princess" or indeed "brother" or "wife", but never ask you to draw "transgender person" or "stone butch". Most of the time, if what I want to convey is "person", I am happy that a stick figure can be whatever gender the viewer wants them to be, they're just a generic example of a person. Eg a stick figure playing football is a footballer, not a male footballer. But what to do if the word I'm trying to illustrate is explicitly male or female? There's no reason that a fireman wouldn't also be a trans guy, but I would feel weird including his birth-assigned sex in a simple, symbolic drawing of a hypothetical person.

Date: 2013-07-03 07:55 pm (UTC)
kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
From: [personal profile] kaberett
With "fireman", I'd make the argument that that's "man" in the older, gender-neutral sense ;)

(And yes, I object to masculine pronouns as ~gender-neutral~, but am actually okay with arguments being made for "man" as gender-neutral. I prefer to use terms that are more recognisably neutral, and I'm typically uncomfortable with arguments from etymology rather than usage - prescriptivst rather than descriptivist, I suppose - but the -man suffix is one I will shrug about.)