.... how women are judged based on skirt length....
The words are written all the way up the back of the woman’s leg.
“Matronly” appears at her calf, “proper” at the knee, and “whore” at the
very top — words meant to reflect how women are often perceived based
on the length of their skirt.
The provocative photo, called “Judgment,” was posted by Rosea Lake, a
first-year university student at Capilano University in Vancouver, B.C
on her Tumblr
site in early January. In a matter of a few days, the photo went viral,
with more than 280,000 people liking and re-blogging it on Tumblr.
She took the photo as part of a high school art project last year as a
way to reassess her assumptions and preconceptions about how women
dress.
“If you see a girl wearing something you see as distasteful, then you
automatically discount them as a person and you don’t give them the
opportunity to really be somebody in your eyes,” said Lake, 18. “And
that’s really shameful.”
She says the image is also meant to be a response to rape culture.
Right under the words “slut” and “whore” on model Ali Mackenzie’s leg,
are the words “asking for it.”
Lake says that living in a “rough neighbourhood,” she has often
wondered if her outfit will result in her being “sexually harassed or
verbally abused.”
“These are the things I think about, and I don’t think women in
particular should have to worry about am I going to be raped because of
what I am wearing today?”
When she did the art project, she wrote on her blog that she “used to
assume that all women who wore hijabs were being oppressed . . . and
look(ed) down on and judge any woman who didn’t express her sexuality in
a way that I found appropriate.
“I’d like to think I’m more open now.”
Thanks to the Internet, the image has been seen all around the world.
And it’s a message that has resonated with everyone who has seen it.
She has received emails from women in Turkey and Bosnia who have
loved the photo. Rape survivors from around the world have emailed her
to thank her for her candidness. And professors have asked her
permission to use it in their classes as a teaching tool.
“I think it hit at the right moment. I think it hit people who had
these feelings and thoughts in mind, and wanted to discuss these issues,
but didn’t know how to express them,” she said.
But there have been some people online who have taken it the wrong
way and don’t understand that it’s satire. “There have been some
comments where people say, this must have been made by a man, by a
chauvinist pig . . . which upsets me, but you can’t control the
Internet.
“I think most people know that it’s a photo meant to call out society on its ridiculous views.”
In the meantime, she is making prints of the photo in response to
popular demand — and as a way to make some money as a “poor art
student.” But she knows the exposure the photo has received is
priceless.
“I’m just happy that it has sparked so much dialogue and
conversation. The message is much more important than I am, so I want
people to use it.”
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