- Joined
- Sep 22, 2019
I'm fine with Nathan's apology (as you'd know from my earlier posts), but I think you might be unnecessarily confrontational towards AxelLover. I am sure they dislike stereotypes as much as you do.I am afraid I disagree that we should venture into what the “general public“ “probably” thinks.
The general public where? Japan? Russia? Canada? USA?
What is “feminine”? By whose definition?
The question is silly, loaded, and indeed, cannot be answered without 1) a great deal of definitional work or 2) accepting stereotypes.
As Nathan himself has said it was best not answered in that format. And I agree with Nathan.![]()
The offending question: "Isn't figure skating seen as feminine?' Your ideal response could be condensed as "I refuse to answer this foolish stereotype-riddled question", while their response is "Some people stereotype all skating as being feminine, but not all skating fits this stereotype."
The advantage of your response is that the responder has a clear moral stance condemning stereotypes, but the downside is that they don't clearly explain why the stereotype is wrong. The other response attempts to lay out the stereotype and rebut it. It's riskier because if not executed carefully, it sounds like the responder agrees with the stereotype. Someone like Paul Poirier (one of the most tactful and articulate skaters/humans on the planet) could probably manage the latter approach. I agree that Nathan (in that place and time) wasn't skilled enough to pull it off, and it probably is wisest for most skaters (who are generally young and not well-versed in talking about socially complex topics) not to engage.



