The Grand Narrative

Men in Pink

Posted in Korean Education, Living in Korea by James Turnbull on October 17th, 2007

In the first few days after I arrived in Korea back in May 2000, the sights, sounds and smells were naturally all a bit of a blur, but maybe because the clothes and hairstyles were just sooo different then they stuck in my mind much more quickly. I was living in a University district, so I saw many cases of  ”couple clothes” of course, which I admit I can see the cute side of but which no self-respecting Western male would ever wear, but what really stood out was the number of men wearing pink or pastel colours. Not just the odd guy here and there, that wouldn’t be a big deal, but on some days there were so many that it seemed like every 4th or 5th guy was. I am not exaggerating. Still today, if I pay attention to my what my 19 year-old 재수 students are wearing, in a class of 50 I often find 3 or 4 guys wearing pink or purple but no women wearing it at all.

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FeetmanSeoul here rightfully thinks MC몽’s clothes above are ridiculous, but that may give the impression that they are the exception: actually, I see many of my students in similar setups everyday. I have mixed feelings about it. On the one hand, young Korean men in particular have a very narrow window between very regimented school life and equally regimented salaryman life once they graduate university, and their 2 year military service in the midst of all that is no fun either…so, hell, let them have fun, dress how they feel like, and look stupid, because they won’t get another chance. Also, Koreans as a whole are not well known for diversity and not caring about other’s opinions (to put it mildly), so I’d be the last person to insist that they should dress exactly the same as New Zealanders or Americans. But pink?!!

Of course I’d be shirking my duty if didn’t tell them to please, please, please leave all the pink clothes (and pastel, and tight jeans) at home if they ever go overseas to study, that’s a given, but no matter how much I want diversity, I don’t think I can ever really respect a guy wearing pink. Just like I can never respect a guy called George, because…ahem…back when I was very young I had a cabbage patch kid that I named George. Fortunately, I’ve never actually met a guy called George since.

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I’ve had seven years to think about this pink issue, but I still haven’t changed my mind. It turns out though, that this dislike isn’t some Western cultural baggage on my part at all, but very masculine, virile, full-blooded males like myself instinctively regard the colour as feminine:

Sex, shopping and thinking pink
Aug 23rd 2007
From The Economist print edition 

The brains of men and women are, indeed, different

WOMEN really are better than men at shopping. And they really do prefer pink. And, surprisingly, it is possible that these facts are connected. The first conclusion was drawn by Joshua New of Yale University and his colleagues. The second was drawn by Anya Hurlbert and Yazhu Ling of Newcastle University in England. The connecting theme is that in the division of labour that forms the primordial bargain of human hunter-gatherer societies, it is the men who do the hunting and the women who do the gathering.

Blackberry-picking aside, urban humanity does little gathering from the wild these days, so Dr New decided to look at what seemed to him to be the nearest equivalent-shopping at a farmers’ market. There is a fair amount of evidence that men are better than women at solving certain sorts of spatial problems, such as remembering the locations of topographical landmarks. Many researchers suggest such skills may have been important in the past for man-the-hunter, who needed to be able to find his way round the landscape. If that is the case, then woman-the-gatherer might have been expected to develop complementary skills not shown by males. And that, as he writes in this week’s Proceedings of the Royal Society, is what Dr New found.

Dr New used the market to test two hypotheses. The first was that women remember the locations of food resources more accurately than men do. The second was that the more nutritionally valuable a resource is, the more accurately its location will be remembered.

To prove these conjectures he recruited 41 women and 45 men and led each of them individually on a merry dance around the chosen market. In the course of this peregrination, each participant visited six of the 90 food stalls in the market. At each of those stalls, participants were given a piece of food to eat. They were asked their preference for the taste of the food, how often they ate that food in normal life, how attractive they found the stall and how often they had made purchases from that stall in the past. After visiting all six stalls, they were taken to the centre of the market and asked to point toward those stalls, one at a time, using an arrow on a dial. In addition, they were asked to rate their own sense of direction.

In the pink

On average, women were 9° more accurate than men at pointing to each stall-a significant deviation if you have to walk some distance to get to a place. This was not because those women had more experience of visiting the market than the men had. Nor did the women rate themselves as having a better sense of direction-indeed the men rated their own navigating skills more highly.

Dr New suggests that these results show women are better than men at the particular task of relocating sources of food. That contrasts with the idea that men are better at navigation in general. In other words, women’s minds are specialised for their ancestral task of gathering the sort of food that cannot run away.

That such food is in a different mental category from the one occupied by general landmarks was suggested by the answer to the second hypothesis. The higher the calorific value of the food sold by a stall, the more accurately Dr New’s volunteers were able to point towards it. And that result applied to both sexes, though women still did better than men.

How much the participants liked the food did not have an effect on this accuracy. Indeed none of the secondary attributes of the food or stall in question (taste preference, the frequency of an item in a volunteer’s normal diet, the appearance of the stall and how often a volunteer used that stall in daily life) were found to affect pointing accuracy. Only the calorific value of the item in question was relevant.

For their part Dr Hurlbert and Dr Ling, who report their study in Current Biology, used coloured patches flashing on a computer screen to find the preferences of their set of volunteers. These volunteers were men and women of British and Chinese origin who were in their early 20s.

Mostly, the two researchers found that people of different sexes and from different continents did not differ in their colour preferences. But there was one exception. Among both the British and the Chinese, women preferred reddish hues such as pink to greenish-blue ones. Among men it was the other way round.

Moreover, though anatomical sex is binary, mental “gender” is more pliable. To see how masculine or feminine the brains of their participants were, Dr Hurlbert and Dr Ling used what is known as the Bem Sex Role Inventory, which asks about personality traits more often associated with one sex than the other. This showed that the more feminine a brain was, regardless of the body it inhabited, the more it liked red and pink.

All this suggests a biological, rather than a cultural, explanation for colour preference. And Dr Hurlbert and Dr Ling have produced one. They suggest that their result may be connected with the fact that the colour of many fruits is at the red end of the spectrum. An evolved preference for red, pink and allied shades-particularly in contrast with green-could thus bring advantage to those who gather such things. And if they can also remember which tree (or stall) to go and visit next time, then so much the better.

Regular readers may be at little surprised at this break from Korean issues into the science and technology section of the Economist, but actually it isn’t actually much of a jump at all for me: after all, in my freshman year I was studying to be an astronomer before an ankle injury diverted me to History and Political studies in my second year. I’m still crazy about absolutely anything to do with science so, I’m sorry, for I know you’re all fascinated by Korea’s manufacturing industry and low birth rate, but there’ll be a lot more posts like this one in the future.

In the meantime, I think the fact that 19-25 year-old Korean men go against their instincts and embrace pink here just goes to show how little time they do have to have fun and wear what the hell they like, so good on them; even if I’ll never wear pink myself, I understand why they do. But I’m much less happy with the Korean culture surrounding having a shaved head (scroll down for the English), because while we all know that my own baldness is the result of my excess testosterone and raging virility, Korean women’s cultural disdain for men with shaved heads is so strong that it trumps their basic instinct to acknowledge and embrace me as the prime male specimen that I am. But, probably wisely, I’ll leave that discussion for another post.

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6 Responses to 'Men in Pink'

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  1. Haterette said, on October 17th, 2007 at 1:30 pm

    Actually, FeetManSeoul didn’t opine on MC몽’s outfit. I did. However, for what it’s worth, thanks for the link ;)

  2. James Turnbull said, on October 17th, 2007 at 1:41 pm

    Sorry, I forgot that there are lots of contributors on that blog. I’ll be sure to give credit where credit’s due from now on!

  3. pink » Men in Pink said, on October 18th, 2007 at 1:52 pm

    [...] Read the rest of this great post here [...]

  4. Korea Beat said, on October 18th, 2007 at 3:42 pm

    As I recall the pink is for girls, blue is for boys thing is a 20th-century construct. In the 19th century it what was the opposite. Pink was considered a masculine color and little boys wore it.

    Ah yes, here we go.

    http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=238733

  5. surin2sayan said, on October 18th, 2007 at 5:23 pm

    Come on, my wedding dress, the Korean traditonal was pink and some blue. It was already old fashion in 1993, and we can laugh about it today.
    And my Korean spouse was wearing an old Hungarian hat in winter time during the first years, what made her looking like Attila.

  6. gordsellar said, on October 18th, 2007 at 5:56 pm

    It was pink sweater day on campus, today. For the boys, at least. Or so it seems. My girlfriend doesn’t understand why this seems odd to me.

    The hair, too. She doesn’t get why I think it’s ridiculous she associates the hairstyle I like to wear — hair buzzed down to almost nothing — exclusively with gangsters and monks. I’m like, “But the rest of the world doesn’t think that!” and she’s like, “But it looks weird!” and I’m like, “Not to most of the world!” And on it goes.

    But one thing I will say is, I have never met a man with that overdone spiky “Japanese-styled” hair who wasn’t a solid D student. Okay, maybe C.

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