{"id":11852,"date":"2012-08-09T09:49:46","date_gmt":"2012-08-09T08:49:46","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=11852"},"modified":"2012-08-10T06:41:42","modified_gmt":"2012-08-10T05:41:42","slug":"guest-post-further-adventures-with-magazine-rack-sexism","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2012\/08\/09\/guest-post-further-adventures-with-magazine-rack-sexism\/","title":{"rendered":"[Guest Post] Further Adventures with Magazine Rack Sexism"},"content":{"rendered":"
Lizzie<\/strong> sent us the following update to her
recent previous guest post<\/a> this morning. If you have a guest post
brewing in your brain, you know what to do: pitch us at badrepeditors@gmail.com<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n
About a month ago I emailed both Sainsburys and Tesco, following it up
with tweets, about the gendering of magazines. It seemed wrong that
New Scientist<\/strong>,
Photography<\/strong>,
NME<\/strong>,
The Economist<\/strong> and
Private Eye<\/strong> sat in ‘Men’s
Interests’ sections while women had the 3,738 fashion
and beauty mags as well as knitting and cooking mags.<\/p>\n
Tesco were the first to respond, telling me via tweet that
they were passing this up to central management:<\/p>\n
It took a while for anything else to happen, but a week
later I
got an email from Sainsburys<\/a> saying that where they
were refurbishing or creating a new store, they would cease
to gender their magazines.<\/p>\n
Fabulous. I mean, I would prefer it if they spent the small
amount of money printing new labels for the plastic holders
on their magazine racks and replaced them all NOW, but
that’s because they have a lot of stores, and seeing
this every day still makes my head hurt and fear for young
girls who go in and subconsciously learn that science and
politics are not for them and that they should concentrate
on being pretty while cooking.1<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n
But Tesco still haven’t replied properly. Nothing
more except another tweet to BadRep saying management
are looking at it. And now, the Everyday
Sexism Project<\/a> (@EverydaySexism<\/a>
on Twitter, and you can also check out the hashtag
#everydaysexism) is really helping out – drawing
attention to the gendered labels in a local store and
retweeting those pressuring @UKTesco<\/a>
to take some form of action.<\/p>\n
What would be even better would be for more of us to
email them. And while you’re at it, email
Sainsburys too and ask them to put their hand in their
pocket to start making the changes now, so we
don’t have to look at this sexism everyday.
It’s just not good enough.<\/p>\n
\n