nonethefewer: (Default)
Chris ([personal profile] nonethefewer) wrote2010-02-01 09:41 am

(no subject)

Yall.  YALL.

MANSPLAINING.

This might be some of why I have to word everything Super Carefully in order to get answers to the questions I ask.

"I search in Yelp for fast food, and it turns up a jewelery store.  Why?"

"Did you know you could click the Fast Food box in the search options box?  That might help."

"No, no, I was completely unaware of what was staring me in the face.  Thank you!  I was asking about why it would think a jewelery store was anything like a fast food store, but clearly it's not that Yelp is occasionally full of bees, it's that my eyes are somehow broken."

(Total hypothetical.)

I am in a seriously cranktacular mood this morning.

[identity profile] mcsnee.livejournal.com 2010-02-01 05:55 pm (UTC)(link)
To be fair, the other side to this is that people really do ask stupid questions all the time (as you know), and an initial question like that can weed out the stupid.

[identity profile] the-xtina.livejournal.com 2010-02-01 05:56 pm (UTC)(link)
I come off as people??

I am now thoroughly horrified.
rosefox: Green books on library shelves. (Default)

[personal profile] rosefox 2010-02-01 06:17 pm (UTC)(link)
Did you see Justine Larbalestier's post on it? It was great, and then a bunch of men showed up to mansplain why she was totally wrong and there was no such thing.

[identity profile] zandperl.livejournal.com 2010-02-01 10:28 pm (UTC)(link)
To be fair, sometimes what comes off as mansplaining is actually that person being a condescending prick to everyone, not just women. This is more obvious if the person they're being a prick to isn't a woman, or if the person being a prick isn't a man.

On the other hand, this term perfectly describes an incident a few weeks ago where a student tried to explain something to me. You'd think me being his prof would've forestalled that bit of mansplation, but no.