Actually, I was an undergraduate in 1993 (when this was first written) and I can assure you that there did exist women who did geeky stuff, were in STEM fields, etc. In fact, I did research for a professor then who was precisely such a woman. I don't want to overstate this, but little things like these add up to a perception that things were a way that wasn't really the case.
Are you referring to the phrase, "clothes make the man" (which I've always taken to be relatively gender-neutral, since it's about how your presentation affects how others treat you / see you), or to the references to wearing pants/slacks?
Good catch. Its interesting that the gender-neutrality comes only in the "Sex" and "Relationships" sections, and that the only female "I am <famous person>" comes in "Sex" for "I am Madonna."
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[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 71.6 ms ] threadHaving said that, GCS/MU d-- s-:++ a C+++$ UL+(+++) P+++ L++ E--- W+++ N++ w+ M++ PS+ PE++ Y+ PGP- !t X-- R++ tv-- b+ DI++++ D+ G+ e++ h---- r+++.
"Geek" and/or "Nerd" were interchangable in the 80s meant someone that was despised by society.
Or is that a nerd?