Malafemmin(ist)a

By Michelle Tarnopolsky

  • Home
  • About
  • Writing
  • Interviews
  • Translation
IMG_6571.jpg

Playing with gender norms and bucking the school smock trend

March 11, 2014 by Michelle Tarnopolsky in Feminism, Italy, Parenting, LGBTQ and Gender

When Peanut started public preschool last September, Andrea went out to buy his first grembiule with my instructions to get one in any colour but blue or pink. He was unsuccessful.

While school kids in Italy don't tend to wear uniforms, per se, they do wear smocks until about grade five. The colour is usually at the discretion of the teacher, sometimes the school, and the choice is very limited. Not necessarily pink/blue but often clearly divided between genders.

I wasn't prepared to accept it was impossible to find a neutral-coloured smock for Peanut, though. In fact, a quick search online soon produced Divise&Divise, which offers grembiuli da bambino in yellow, red, black and aqua in addition to the classic pink, blue and white [update: they no longer offer these]. I got him a red one, and I just love it.

IMG_8378.jpg

Major brownie points for Peanut's teachers being fine with the neutral colour, even though the rest of his class is all in pink and blue. Elsewhere I have seen a lot of school girls in blue, which seems to be the most popular smock colour in Italy in general. I'm not so sure Peanut's teachers would have been OK with him wearing a pink one. But you know, I'm picking my battles and all that.

IMG_8368.jpg

Googling grembiule scuola colori led me to this very cool piece in the Corriere della Sera newspaper from April 2012 about a school in Castelfiorentino, Tuscany that actually made a feminist point of having all the kids wear blue. The day they make them all wear pink is the day we know Italy has finally turned a corner on this ridiculousness. Of course, it's not like the rest of the world is there yet either. But Italians still seem a lot more afraid than other Westerners of playing even a teensy bit with gender norms. SIGH.

IMG_8367.jpg
March 11, 2014 /Michelle Tarnopolsky
school smocks, gender norms, gender issues, gender binary, gender equality, feminist parenting, grembiule bambino, grembiule scuola
Feminism, Italy, Parenting, LGBTQ and Gender
8 Comments
  • Newer
  • Older
Featured
Motherhood studies conference in Florence next May: call for papers
Feminism, Italy, Parenting
Oct 23, 2017
Motherhood studies conference in Florence next May: call for papers
Feminism, Italy, Parenting
Oct 23, 2017
Feminism, Italy, Parenting
Oct 23, 2017
beautiful-womanhood-vintage-poster
Feminism, Italy
Jul 13, 2017
What makes a woman? A guest post by Sarah Bairstow
Feminism, Italy
Jul 13, 2017
Feminism, Italy
Jul 13, 2017
Italy, LGBTQ and Gender
Jun 5, 2017
A day to be proud of
Italy, LGBTQ and Gender
Jun 5, 2017
Italy, LGBTQ and Gender
Jun 5, 2017
Florence Birth Stories, Breastfeeding, Pregnancy and Childbirth
Mar 22, 2017
Florence Birth Story 6: Kate and Emma at Villa Donatello
Florence Birth Stories, Breastfeeding, Pregnancy and Childbirth
Mar 22, 2017
Florence Birth Stories, Breastfeeding, Pregnancy and Childbirth
Mar 22, 2017
Florence Birth Story 3: Miriam and Esme at home
Florence Birth Stories, Italy, Pregnancy and Childbirth
Mar 22, 2017
Florence Birth Story 3: Miriam and Esme at home
Florence Birth Stories, Italy, Pregnancy and Childbirth
Mar 22, 2017
Florence Birth Stories, Italy, Pregnancy and Childbirth
Mar 22, 2017
IMG_8184.jpg
Feminism, Italy
Mar 8, 2017
Women's Day 2017: Why I'm Striking
Feminism, Italy
Mar 8, 2017
Feminism, Italy
Mar 8, 2017
rineke-dijkstra-tecla-1994
Mother Art, Art, Pregnancy & Childbirth
Feb 6, 2017
Mother Art Monday: Rineke Dijkstra
Mother Art, Art, Pregnancy & Childbirth
Feb 6, 2017
Mother Art, Art, Pregnancy & Childbirth
Feb 6, 2017
Feminism, Italy
Dec 19, 2016
Leadership in heels
Feminism, Italy
Dec 19, 2016
Feminism, Italy
Dec 19, 2016
carabiniere_sexy.jpg
Italy, LGBTQ and Gender
Dec 2, 2016
The paradox of Italian masculinity
Italy, LGBTQ and Gender
Dec 2, 2016
Italy, LGBTQ and Gender
Dec 2, 2016
Feminism, Italy, LGBTQ and Gender
Nov 22, 2016
Welcome (back)
Feminism, Italy, LGBTQ and Gender
Nov 22, 2016
Feminism, Italy, LGBTQ and Gender
Nov 22, 2016
  • Parenting
  • Art
  • Mother Art
  • LGBTQ and Gender
  • Culture Clash
  • Florence Birth Stories
  • Body Image
  • Beating the Crisi Blues
  • Uncategorized
  • Pregnancy & Childbirth
  • Quote
  • Travel
  • Feminism
  • Language
  • Race/anti-racism
  • Italy
  • Pregnancy and Childbirth
  • Bilingualism
  • Breastfeeding

Contact me

Name *
Thank you!
Archive
  • January 2010 1
  • February 2010 2
  • March 2010 2
  • April 2010 1
  • May 2010 1
  • August 2010 1
  • October 2010 2
  • January 2011 2
  • February 2011 2
  • March 2011 3
  • April 2011 1
  • May 2011 1
  • June 2011 3
  • July 2011 1
  • August 2011 1
  • January 2012 7
  • February 2012 6
  • March 2012 7
  • April 2012 6
  • May 2012 3
  • June 2012 4
  • July 2012 6
  • August 2012 11
  • September 2012 9
  • October 2012 5
  • November 2012 2
  • December 2012 3
  • January 2013 3
  • February 2013 3
  • March 2013 5
  • April 2013 3
  • May 2013 6
  • June 2013 3
  • July 2013 2
  • August 2013 2
  • September 2013 2
  • November 2013 2
  • December 2013 3
  • January 2014 3
  • March 2014 6
  • May 2014 1
  • June 2014 1
  • September 2014 1
  • October 2014 2
  • January 2015 2
  • February 2015 1
  • March 2015 1
  • May 2015 1
  • July 2016 1
  • November 2016 1
  • December 2016 2
  • February 2017 1
  • March 2017 3
  • June 2017 1
  • July 2017 1
  • October 2017 1

Subscribe

Sign up with your email address and never miss a post.

I respect your privacy.

Thank you!
  • Michelle Tarnopolsky
    “Violence against L.G.B.T. people is just another consequence of sexism. Anatomy is not a person’s destiny.” https://t.co/h833SC5Ln8
    Oct 19, 2020, 3:34 PM

Follow me on Instagram:

Empoli street shrines
Cousins 🥰 (ph @alex_sorani)
Merry Christmas!
Beyond grateful for this lot 🥰 Happy US Thanksgiving!

Powered by Squarespace

Copyright © 2020, Michelle Tarnopolsky. All rights reserved. Photos (unless stated otherwise) and content property of Michelle Tarnopolsky.