science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fieldと呼ばれる、これまでものロールモデルで女性が避けていたキャリアにXファイルが影響していたという真面目な話。
The phenomenon has been known as “The Scully Effect”–named after Gillian Anderson’s character Dana Scully–and the Geena Davis Institute proved it’s real.
When The X-Files premiered in 1993, FBI agent and medical doctor Dana Scully was unlike any other woman on television. Scully, played by Gillian Anderson, was equal to, and not just the sidekick of, Fox Mulder (David Duchovny). She was sharp, resilient, fiercely intelligent, and working a career that most women hadn’t seen themselves in onscreen.
The idea of women becoming interested in the scientific field as a result of Scully has been known for years as “The Scully Effect”–and now there’s data to back it up.
Gillian Anderson
色々あって今はアクティビスト
リンクへ続く
The phenomenon has been known as “The Scully Effect”–named after Gillian Anderson’s character Dana Scully–and the Geena Davis Institute proved it’s real.
When The X-Files premiered in 1993, FBI agent and medical doctor Dana Scully was unlike any other woman on television. Scully, played by Gillian Anderson, was equal to, and not just the sidekick of, Fox Mulder (David Duchovny). She was sharp, resilient, fiercely intelligent, and working a career that most women hadn’t seen themselves in onscreen.
The idea of women becoming interested in the scientific field as a result of Scully has been known for years as “The Scully Effect”–and now there’s data to back it up.
Gillian Anderson
色々あって今はアクティビスト
リンクへ続く