“Throwing like a girl” is a prime example of that sort of thing. Throwing like a girl turns out to be throwing like someone who’s inexperienced with throwing.
If a boy throws like a girl, he’s taught and/or shamed out of it as quickly as possible. If a girl throws like a girl, well, what did you expect?
I’ve phrased this in the present tense, but the culture’s improved on the subject.
Strength is determined by biology and behavior; the stereotype reflects both biological reality and cultural expectations. Note that boys are/were expected to be stronger than girls even before puberty actually creates a meaningful biological gap...
“Throwing like a girl” is a prime example of that sort of thing. Throwing like a girl turns out to be throwing like someone who’s inexperienced with throwing.
If a boy throws like a girl, he’s taught and/or shamed out of it as quickly as possible. If a girl throws like a girl, well, what did you expect?
I’ve phrased this in the present tense, but the culture’s improved on the subject.
Now consider a similar-sounding stereotype: “Men are physically stronger than women”. Think that’s fixable by different expectations?
While some stereotypes reflect cultural expectations, some reflect biological reality.
Strength is determined by biology and behavior; the stereotype reflects both biological reality and cultural expectations. Note that boys are/were expected to be stronger than girls even before puberty actually creates a meaningful biological gap...