Human beings rely on categories to understand the world. We group things together because it helps us process complexity. We categorize animals, plants, foods, music genres, personality types, and countless other aspects of life. In many ways, this instinct is practical and necessary. Without categories, making sense of the world around us would be far more difficult.
However, categories can sometimes create confusion rather than clarity—and media has amplified the problem.
This becomes especially apparent when discussing men and women.
From a biological standpoint, describing male and female is relatively straightforward. Biological sex can be defined through reproductive anatomy, chromosomes, and hormonal patterns. These distinctions can matter in specific contexts. For example, physicians may need this information in order to provide appropriate medical care, and it may be relevant in intimate relationships or situations involving reproduction.
Outside of those contexts, however, the conversation often shifts away from biology and toward something far more subjective: cultural expectations. And these expectations have been constantly reinforced over time by media—art, storybooks, radio, television, and more—shaping not only what people wear or how they behave, but also how we interpret gender itself.
Rather than limiting the definition to biological differences, societies frequently attach long lists of traits, behaviors, and appearances to the categories of “man” and “woman.” These definitions begin to include things like clothing, tone of voice, mannerisms, hobbies, and emotional expression. Media has historically played a role in cementing these norms: from illustrated storybooks showing girls in pink dresses and boys in blue, to early radio dramas portraying women as nurturing homemakers and men as stoic breadwinners, to television sitcoms of the mid-twentieth century reinforcing exaggerated gender behaviors.
Women wear dresses.
Men wear pants.
Women speak softly.
Men speak firmly.
Women are nurturing.
Men are stoic.
Women move a certain way.
Men gesture differently.
Women like pink.
Men like blue.
The moment cultural expectations enter the definition, the categories become much harder to defend as fixed or universal truths. What is often described as “natural” frequently turns out to be cultural habit, magnified by media repetition.
Clothing offers one of the clearest examples. In many Western societies today, dresses and skirts are considered feminine clothing. Yet across history and around the world, many men have worn garments that resemble what modern audiences might interpret as dresses.
Scottish men wear kilts. In parts of the Middle East and North Africa, men traditionally wear long robes such as the thobe or djellaba. In South Asia, garments like the lungi or kurta have been worn by men for generations. In ancient Rome and Greece, men commonly wore tunics that today might easily be categorized as dress-like garments. Yet media representation often ignores these examples, presenting “men in pants, women in dresses” as universal and timeless.
High heels provide another example of how gender norms evolve. Today, they are widely associated with women’s fashion. Historically, however, high heels were first worn by men—particularly Persian cavalry riders, who used them to secure their feet in stirrups while riding. In seventeenth-century Europe, aristocratic men adopted high heels as a symbol of status and masculinity. Over time, fashion trends shifted, and heels gradually became associated primarily with women. Television and cinema helped cement this shift, showing women in heels as glamorous, while men in heels became largely absent from mainstream visual culture.
Even color associations illustrate the fluid nature of gender norms. In the early twentieth century in the United States, pink was often recommended for boys because it was considered a stronger and more assertive variation of red. Blue, viewed as softer and more delicate, was sometimes suggested for girls. The modern association of pink with femininity developed later through shifting cultural preferences and marketing trends—and advertising, magazines, and television shows played a major role in embedding these color norms into everyday consciousness.
These examples highlight an important distinction: when we attach meaning to outward traits like clothing, voice, posture, or hobbies, we are usually describing culture—not biology. Media amplifies these associations, repeatedly showing people what is “appropriate” for men and women, which can make deviations feel socially risky or unacceptable.
Ironically, the more social expectations that are layered onto the categories of “man” and “woman,” the more disagreement and debate tends to emerge. If the categories were limited strictly to biological descriptions, there would be far less room for interpretation. But once definitions begin to include personality traits, emotional expression, style choices, and behavior, the boundaries become far less clear—especially when media has conditioned audiences to expect specific behaviors or appearances from each gender.
A woman can have a deep voice.
A man can be gentle and nurturing.
A woman can dislike dresses.
A man can enjoy fashion.
None of these characteristics change a person’s humanity, yet rigid expectations—reinforced by decades of media messages—can create the sense that people must pass an invisible test in order to fit within a category.
This challenge is not unique to discussions about people. Similar patterns appear in how humans classify animals.
Scientists categorize animals based on anatomical traits, evolutionary history, and digestive systems. These classifications are useful, but they can sometimes give the impression that behavior is more rigid than it actually is.
Consider the giant panda. Pandas belong to the biological order Carnivora because of their skeletal structure, teeth, and evolutionary lineage, which connect them to other meat-eating animals such as bears and wolves. Yet in practice, pandas eat almost entirely bamboo, making their daily diet overwhelmingly herbivorous.
Brown bears provide another example. They are also classified as carnivores due to their anatomy and evolutionary background, but their diet includes berries, nuts, grasses, insects, fish, and small mammals. In reality, many bears eat in ways that are closer to what we would describe as omnivorous.
Deer, by contrast, are classic herbivores. Their digestive systems are specifically adapted to process plant material, and their teeth are designed for grinding vegetation. Yet even deer have been observed occasionally eating bird eggs, small animals, or carrion when nutrients are scarce.
Chimpanzees present another interesting case. They are generally considered omnivores because their diet includes fruit, leaves, seeds, and insects. However, they are also known to hunt and eat small mammals such as monkeys. Their classification reflects biological capability, but their behavior can vary depending on environment and opportunity.
These examples illustrate how categories often describe tendencies rather than rigid rules. The biological classification may be technically accurate, yet real-world behavior frequently exists along a spectrum. Media reinforces the human tendency to interpret categories rigidly, often portraying simplified, idealized, or exaggerated behaviors as “normal” for each gender.
Human beings are no different. When people are sorted into rigid social categories based on external signals—such as clothing, voice, personality traits, or hobbies—we risk imposing artificial simplicity on something that is naturally complex. And when media repeatedly validates these simplified categories, the pressure to conform becomes more pervasive.
And in the process, dignity can be lost.
Dignity should be the starting point for how we treat one another. Every person deserves basic respect simply because they are human. One does not need to know someone’s chromosomes to treat them with kindness, nor does one need to know someone’s anatomy to show them courtesy in everyday interactions. Most of the time, the biological details of another person’s body simply are not relevant to daily life.
Outside of medical care or intimate relationships, those details remain largely private.
What matters far more is how we treat people—whether we approach others with curiosity, patience, and respect rather than judging them based on whether they match a cultural script amplified by media.
Categories can be valuable tools for understanding the world. But they should never become cages that restrict human dignity.
A more thoughtful approach recognizes two realities at the same time: biology exists, and culture builds layers of meaning around it. Understanding that distinction allows people to navigate the world with greater humility and greater respect for the diversity of human experience.
Because ultimately, dignity should never depend on whether someone fits perfectly into a social category.
Dignity belongs to every human being.
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