[Trans] ESPORTS: It's not just for men - Page 8
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Sekhmet
United States81 Posts
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a176
Canada6688 Posts
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ptbl
United States6074 Posts
On January 05 2011 21:37 CanucksJC wrote: Women do lack stamina. Look at every other sport and tell me in which one a woman holds a record over a man. Swimming, running, jumping, soccer, hockey, basketball. Men are clearly superior. I don't think men are superior. Males and females have different strengths. Just imagine telling your daughter "sweetie, men are clearly better and superior than you." Anyway, thanks for translating the interview. Much kudos! | ||
crudo
Germany36 Posts
amazing | ||
crappen
Norway1546 Posts
On January 07 2011 05:34 ptbl wrote: I don't think men are superior. Males and females have different strengths. Just imagine telling your daughter "sweetie, men are clearly better and superior than you." Anyway, thanks for translating the interview. Much kudos! If I had a daughter, I would have told her that if she asked or if it was brought up, but keep in mind that I would not use a tone that she is doomed etc. It does not matter that men are superior to her in sports, it matter that she wants to be all that she can be, to fulfill all her potential. And competing in woman sports is just as competing as men anyways. Even though she is inferior, the feeling and the competition is not. Tbh I dont see how this has anything to do with what this interview here is. One woman here complains that her voice can not hold at climax, so what, cant she go around it using a different approach? She is in a unique position, to be one of the first few woman that commentate in this field, why does she have to throw this away by looking at what she lacks? Tossgirl has a very devestating excuse, that her male counterpart just have more stamina, which I find is just an excuse. All it takes are confidence and daring to try out new things. One of the girls told them to not listen what others tell them to do, but find their own style. That was the best advice given, and they should focus on that and not blame society and what not. | ||
ptbl
United States6074 Posts
On January 07 2011 05:46 crappen wrote: If I had a daughter, I would have told her that if she asked or if it was brought up, but keep in mind that I would not use a tone that she is doomed etc. It does not matter that men are superior to her in sports, it matter that she wants to be all that she can be, to fulfill all her potential. And competing in woman sports is just as competing as men anyways. Even though she is inferior, the feeling and the competition is not. Tbh I dont see how this has anything to do with what this interview here is. One woman here complains that her voice can not hold at climax, so what, cant she go around it using a different approach? She is in a unique position, to be one of the first few woman that commentate in this field, why does she have to throw this away by looking at what she lacks? Tossgirl has a very devestating excuse, that her male counterpart just have more stamina, which I find is just an excuse. All it takes are confidence and daring to try out new things. One of the girls told them to not listen what others tell them to do, but find their own style. That was the best advice given, and they should focus on that and not blame society and what not. You have an interesting perspective regarding the dynamics of women empowerment. Personally, I would tell my daughter, if I also had one () to reach for the stars, create her own path in life, and try your best. I think we can agree that you don't want women in our society to see themselves as second class citizens and inferior to men. After all, this isn't the middle ages! I think Tossgirl has the wrong attitude. She's already set herself back 10 steps if she's blaming her lack of success from being female. Though, I don't blame her. When an entire culture perpetuates that females are inferior, weak, and "emotionally unstable," it's hard to fight against these baseless perceptions. She should draw strength from her gender and let it empower her. If a female child says, "I want to be the first women president" or "I want to win the GSL," I will tell her to try hard, don't give up, and reach for the stars. | ||
Haemonculus
United States6980 Posts
On January 06 2011 05:29 crappen wrote: Females are not very welcome in social settings when men are talking. Female can often invoke conflict and emotions in men that could set them up against another. Men are also very sensitive, our toes can easily be stepped on, and we remember it well. Alright, but who's fault is this? Surely you aren't blaming women for men's inability to control themselves? Yes the male ego and masculinity are hilariously fragile, but perhaps they should try to take ownership of that? But I think that a woman who has a family of her own can go well in mens social clubs, as she is married and have kids, she is no longer wanted by other men and will not set men up against each other. And until then? Shall we stay home in the kitchen so as not to ruffle any feathers? This sense of hostility is largely responsible for there not being many women involved in gaming in the first place. | ||
Kinetik_Inferno
United States1431 Posts
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blakbeard
United States19 Posts
On January 07 2011 06:02 ptbl wrote: You have an interesting perspective regarding the dynamics of women empowerment. Personally, I would tell my daughter, if I also had one () to reach for the stars, create her own path in life, and try your best. I think we can agree that you don't want women in our society to see themselves as second class citizens and inferior to men. After all, this isn't the middle ages! I think Tossgirl has the wrong attitude. She's already set herself back 10 steps if she's blaming her lack of success from being female. Though, I don't blame her. When an entire culture perpetuates that females are inferior, weak, and "emotionally unstable," it's hard to fight against these baseless perceptions. She should draw strength from her gender and let it empower her. If a female child says, "I want to be the first women president" or "I want to win the GSL," I will tell her to try hard, don't give up, and reach for the stars. First of all, I'm not sure that the athletic type stamina that runners & other athletes need is related to starcraft at all. Obviously there are physiological/genetic differences between men and women, but we don't know exactly which "female" characteristics are due to physiology and which are simply artificial societal constructs. It seems to me, women especially should assume the latter and work as hard as possible, while challenging all of societies assumptions that women are "weak, emotional, etc." Overall, TossGirl's mindset seems counterproductive for both herself and women in general. There have been countless studies showing that your expectations for yourself hugely affect your performance; i.e. if she assumes that she won't be able to practice very long because she's female, her brain will make that a reality. | ||
GTR
51272 Posts
On January 06 2011 22:10 crappen wrote: What I dont understand, is why she have the job? Is it only cause she is female? If that is the case, I can understand their frustration in that they dont feel cut for the job, but got it anyway cause of being female. Cant be fun having a job you dont know exactly why. Wish people could just be straight with them. Either tell them as it is, that their role is to only be "middleman" in the commentating, that they are not suppose to show off climax voice casting, or saying smart things. she's been around since the dawn of time (i remember seeing her doing wcg 2002 with gametv). i guess its just a sign of respect from ogn to keep her around because she's been around for so long. | ||
intotheheart
Canada33091 Posts
I did too, honestly? Thought that it was some form of appeal to Blizzard from OnGameNet or MBC. | ||
dbizzle
United States395 Posts
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Mephiztopheles1
1124 Posts
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threehundred
Canada911 Posts
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judytuna
United States217 Posts
I opened the Economist to a random page today and saw an article about a new book on sexual determination. Check it out: http://www.economist.com/node/17797036 Here's a quote (from the article, not the book): In some ways men and women are consistently different, but the significant differences in their brains only pertain to those primitive behaviours which include mating, parenting and aggression. When it comes to higher functions—the skills that arguably make us human—the similarities outweigh the differences. On average, men and women score equally on mathematical and reading ability, for example. Reported differences in empathy, leadership and verbal fluency have all been exaggerated, according to Mr Pfaff. Where differences in these skills do exist, the causes may lie in the social context. I am not a sociologist, nor a microbiologist, but I find this fascinating. It's very difficult to talk about gender and sexual traits because, as the article mentions (and I'm sure the book goes way more into this), even things such as maternal stress can cause a baby with male DNA to get more feminine traits, and there are huge societal factors at play too. So it's way too glib to just say "of course the reason there are no women in games is women can't play strategy games." It's more complicated than that, and I'm sure even the "aggression" displayed in male brains is a specific kind, bla bla bla. It's way complicated, and I don't have the answers, but I do want to echo what I saw elsewhere on this page: On January 07 2011 07:13 Haemonculus wrote: And until then? Shall we stay home in the kitchen so as not to ruffle any feathers? This sense of hostility is largely responsible for there not being many women involved in gaming in the first place. Regardless of the top-level stuff where issues of physical stamina and stuff matter... It's kinda hard to get girls (in casual play) to stay around because the environment's pretty hostile. You get into a kind of chicken-and-egg situation.... girls are rare, so people say things like "you play like a girl" as an insult, and then girls are like "that's hostile" and then they don't play, so it self-perpetuates. I don't know what to do about it. But I'm glad we're sort of talking about it. Thank you again, OP. The article meant a lot to me... the women's candor, and the inside look at esports. When she said she wishes to be a man in her next life every day when she wakes up... that is just fucking heartbreaking. I don't even think that. I have no idea what to do about it, and change takes a long time, but I'm glad they're working hard to do what they love. It's very inspirational, even if it is fucking depressing at the same time. | ||
Hikko
United States1126 Posts
"[Trans] ESPORTS: It's not just for men " I think it is supposed to be about transvestite players coming out and admitting they aren't men. It wouldn't be too far fetched, we already know that Flash is a robot Thank you for the translation! | ||
Khul Sadukar
Australia1735 Posts
Mad props to all our translators for their time and effort doing this. Maybe one day i'll be able to browse fomos myself :p | ||
Darkn3ss
United States717 Posts
*drools!* Actually all 5 are pretty hot. I'm on a verge of quitting everything I do, investing into gosu coaching, practicing 14/hrs a day and moving to Korea in 2012!!! XD | ||
crappen
Norway1546 Posts
On January 07 2011 13:26 judytuna wrote: Thank you very much OP for doing the work of translating this for us. I'm glad that the Korean media is interested enough to facilitate discussion of the issue. =) I opened the Economist to a random page today and saw an article about a new book on sexual determination. Check it out: http://www.economist.com/node/17797036 Here's a quote (from the article, not the book): I am not a sociologist, nor a microbiologist, but I find this fascinating. It's very difficult to talk about gender and sexual traits because, as the article mentions (and I'm sure the book goes way more into this), even things such as maternal stress can cause a baby with male DNA to get more feminine traits, and there are huge societal factors at play too. So it's way too glib to just say "of course the reason there are no women in games is women can't play strategy games." It's more complicated than that, and I'm sure even the "aggression" displayed in male brains is a specific kind, bla bla bla. It's way complicated, and I don't have the answers, but I do want to echo what I saw elsewhere on this page: Regardless of the top-level stuff where issues of physical stamina and stuff matter... It's kinda hard to get girls (in casual play) to stay around because the environment's pretty hostile. You get into a kind of chicken-and-egg situation.... girls are rare, so people say things like "you play like a girl" as an insult, and then girls are like "that's hostile" and then they don't play, so it self-perpetuates. I don't know what to do about it. But I'm glad we're sort of talking about it. Thank you again, OP. The article meant a lot to me... the women's candor, and the inside look at esports. When she said she wishes to be a man in her next life every day when she wakes up... that is just fucking heartbreaking. I don't even think that. I have no idea what to do about it, and change takes a long time, but I'm glad they're working hard to do what they love. It's very inspirational, even if it is fucking depressing at the same time. If she backs off cause someone tells her "you play like a girl" you simply do not have what it takes in a competive environment. In fact, I thought girls was much stronger then men when it comes to insults like this. Have you seen how hostile women can be towards another? So women can take this just fine, the critics and insults. Believing in yourself is a challenge for everyone. Having society doubt you, look down on you for choosing a "male" lifestyle instead of being a loving mother is for sure something that is worth talking about. But this is cases for men too, many times they also had to just go for it despite having family, society and what not doubt and tell you different. Someone has to be the first and become a rolemodel, its hard, but its just what it is. Not everyone is born into everyone believing in you. Having kids is not an easy task, and its true that the mother is given a lot of responsibility in that regard. Cant imagine having a stressful, competive lifestyle with insults and fan pressure is any good while caring a child. Even after birth having a mother that feel stress and pressure is not really good either. I dont really have any idea what to do about that. | ||
Chef
10810 Posts
But i find it very revealing that these women blamed female's own weaknesses which may make it unsuitable for this line of job instead of complaining about society ( aside from the drinking problem) I found this the most disturbing. Both that you'd think this is a good thing, and that you're correct this is along the lines their thoughts were moving. Some of the worst things said were 'I can't control my emotions like the male reporters' 'criticism is harder for me because I'm a woman.' I haven't read the whole article yet (just the first two part) and I want to read the rest later, but this is really revealing about Korea's culture and gender profiling. If you think the above two quotations are reasonable, you might as well go back to the 19th century when 'hysteria' was the catch all disease for every problem women have ever had. That these women are under more stress because they feel they are being watched more closely is understandable, but that they think women are naturally more emotional? That's very silly. Things like 'I wish I had a male voice' also sound like excuses, as if all males have good exciting voices, and as if an excited female voice is unappealing. I can't totally blame her for thinking this way, but this is clearly her feeling ashamed of being female, which is quite tragic. I was also really shocked at the question 'do you ever wish you were a man' because it is a question that of course is leading, but I'm more surprised that it wasn't offensive at all to them. That would be a pretty appalling question where I'm from. Akin to saying 'do you wish you were white.' The answer should be "I wish people weren't racist.' | ||
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