Give us a gender role early in our life. In the hospital, when a baby is born, they are wrapped in a pink or blue blanket according to the gender of the child. As early as the first few moments in our world, we were overwhelmed by the meaning of girls and boys. Understanding the role of gender is an important aspect of child social interaction. The idea of masculinity and femininity may come from various sources such as parents, media, school systems, etc.
When a nurse wears a pink or blue wristband in her hand, the baby first encounters a stereotype. The girl is pink and the boy is blue. This stereotype happens throughout their childhood and throughout their lives. Babies usually hope to "sex-specific" colors to reduce confusion about gender, and make appropriate toys based on gender. One of the most striking areas of stereotypes is the superiority of gender labels in children's toys (Campenni 122). Gender stereotypes in the toy industry have an adverse effect on the economy by promoting specific gender roles and child behavior. The history of linking pink to girls and blue is only fifty years old. Prior to the 1950s, pink was the color of a boy and blue was the color of a girl (Giudice 1321). Pink is regarded as faded red - bold and furious blood color (Frassanito and Pettorini 881). In Frassanito and Pettorini 881)
History and blue connecting pink and girls and boys are not straight lines. An excerpt from the ladies' home and journal in 1918 states: "The rules that boys generally accept are pink and the girls are blue." After the Second World War, the boy's color logo turned blue and the girl's color changed to pink, but the women's 1970s A liberation campaign was born, a gender selection market for males and females.In the 1980s when technology to detect sex during pregnancy was discovered, girls 'pink color and boys' blues became fashion again. Baby goods marketing