1. The factor that best explains the existence of the blue toy aisle and the pink aisle is a social factor. Pink is perceived as a feminine color and blue, a masculine color. Society has a big influence on what people think and create, generating a m Continue Reading...
Toy Study
Fred Meyer Toy Section
aisle sections of toys; about 1/3 gender neutral, about 1/2 boys, the rest girls. Themes seemed archetypal: Boys = trucks, guns, action figures; Girls = dolls, ovens, dress ups; Gender Neutral = puzzles, constructio Continue Reading...
However,
the toys themselves had a distinctly gendered feel.
While the author recalled Legos as gender-neutral, they did not appear
gender neutral in the toy-store setting. Instead, the Lego products were
based on action movies, such as Star Wars an Continue Reading...
Nairn sees these Barbies as being tortured to destroy the doll's perfection, but the same children (I have noticed from observing female relatives) may demand a new Barbie, even after treating the old one carelessly.
Additionally, not all Barbies a Continue Reading...