|
Less
than a decade ago, national attention was focused on problems
with our society's "pictures" of girls and women by highly
provocative reports sponsored by the American Association of University
Women, as well as by books such as Failing at Fairness
by Myra and David Sadker and School Girls by Peggy Orenstein.
More recently, attention has been focused on the
meaning of gender itself and on the way both girls and boys are
subtly — and not so subtly — prodded to shape themselves
according to consumer-driven images of femininity or masculinity.
The Picturing Women project provides a historical context for the
portrayal of only one gender, but its challenge is clear: how
do we define ourselves, whether we are women or men, girls or boys?
Since the intent of the Picturing Women project
is to raise questions about the nature of gender and representations
of all kinds, the images on this site lend themselves to student
research and reflection. The themes of
Figuring, Fashioning, Portraiting, and Telling
are adaptable across the disciplines, and students can use both
the images and themes to uncover the relationship between the cultural
constraints of time periods and the origins of resistance. Everything
from early anatomical drawings of women to high fashion dictates
provides areas for critical thinking, particularly at a time when
pre-teens and adolescents are bombarded daily with images that attempt
to define them and their gender.
Please encourage students to create their own
juxtapositions and to engage with the interactives, as it is the
cross conversation emerging from people's different experiences
that so enriches learning.
Please note: The history of the representation
of women is one that often pictures partial and full nudity along
with other explicit depictions. Some contemporary artists have chosen
to respond to such conventions in similarly explicit ways. This
Web site reflects both historical conventions and contemporary responses.
These images can be challenging for younger viewers in particular,
but each one offers the opportunity for questioning, discussing,
and learning. |