Date:    Sun, 10 Feb 2002 01:35:17 -0800 
From:    "Larry E. Carroll" <larrydla@JUNO.COM> 
Subject: Tango and Engineers 
 
In my dozen years in the tango world I've been impressed at the variety 
of people (and their professions) who are drawn to tango. I'm a 
(software) engineer myself, working mostly on scientific applications, 
and probably more sensitive than most to the presence of scientists and 
engineers in any arena. I've also been involved over the years with 
salsa, several varieties of swing and ballroom, and other social dances. 
I've never noticed any particular dance drawing specific professions. 
  
Also, even if I granted the premise of "Engineers love tango" that 
wouldn't mean that tango drew analytical, logical minds. What most 
people (even some engineers!) don't realize is that engineering is a 
creative profession. We (like everyone else) solve most problems with 
creativity, not with logic, and logic and critical thinking are only 
used to test solutions. Though we try hard to apply logic to our 
decisions, sometimes spending a lot of time using elaborate weighted 
criteria, in the end we often use these methods to justify decisions 
that we made with intuition and esthetics. And the better the engineer 
or scientist, the more creative we are. 
  
Also, we often have creative hobbies. I worked for 11 years at NASA's 
Jet Propulsion Lab in Pasadena, which is owned and operated by the 
California Institute of Technology. I rubbed elbows with a number of 
scientists, some of them Nobel prize winners and the like. The variety 
and intensity of their creative hobbies - including dancing - would 
amaze most people who only know science and scientists through 
stereotypes. 
  
I'm often amused by people's assumptions about those supposed opposites 
of engineers and scientists - artists of all stripes. Since I'm working 
to become a full-time professional writer and have edited magazines, 
I've know dozens of writers personally over the years. I've also been 
involved in various kinds of art. (In fact, I have a degree in film/TV 
production.) Any professional artist - someone who doesn't eat if they 
don't produce - is very disciplined, even though that may not be obvious 
to the casual observer. We are also very analytical and detail oriented. 
Sit in on a writer's workshop sometimes, as I have dozens of times over 
the years, and you'll see the same kind of thinking and interaction as 
engineers in a design session - or dancers (of ANY kind) at an advanced 
workshop. 
  
People like easy, simple-minded, black and white answers. Often they 
suppose creativity and logic to be opposites, and a person high in one 
always low in the other. In fact, intuitive and practical thought are 
two mostly orthogonal activities, and the healthiest mind has a "right" 
and a "left" brain (like a left and a right arm) of equal sizes and 
strengths, working together. 
  
It is true that a particular kind of thought may predominate in 
different areas. Someone (Laurie Moseley?) pointed out that classes tend 
to focus on analysis and technique and precise repetition of standard 
moves, while dancing (or playing an instrument, giving a speech, 
painting, etc.) tends to focus more on creative and holistic thinking 
and risking mistakes to do something unusual. 
  
This doesn't mean that studying and practicing are inferior or useless 
to dancing. Just as body building gives us the strength and speed and 
endurance to be freer at a sport, so does practicing technique gives us 
the freedom to feel and enjoy when we dance, because technique has 
become mostly automatic. 
  
I suspect that discussions like this one are partly because many of us 
are still trying to figure out just what the Argentine tango is. (And 
partly because a few of us are too lazy to feel more than one part of 
the elephant!) 
  
The problem is that tango is polymorphic, which is one of the things 
that has made me abandon most of the many social dances I've learned in 
several decades of dancing. If the music is boring, or my partner loves 
acrobatics, I can dance tango (or try to, anyway!) with the precision, 
complexity, and athleticism of ballet. If the music is hypnotic, or my 
partner a beginner, I may dance very simply but with much feeling 
(because a tango beginner may yet have a PhD of the heart). 
  
We can dance tango with austere elegance, or sweaty rhythm, or sensuous 
togetherness.  We can dance "milonguero," or canyengue, or "salon," or 
"Nuevo tango," or any of several other styles, all depending on the 
music and the surroundings and (most of all) our partner. 
  
And the sooner someone gives up trying to straitjacket the incredible 
richness of the tango into one simple thing, the sooner they can really 
begin to enjoy all its possibilities. 
  
               Larry de Los Angeles 
               https://home.att.net/~larrydla 
  
  
 
 
 
Date:    Sun, 10 Feb 2002 19:11:59 -0700 
From:    Madhav Apte <mapte@POBOX.COM> 
Subject: Re: Tango and Engineers 
  
Larry has made excellent points. 
His  beautiful sentence has brought me out of silence: 
  
 > 
> always low in the other. In fact, intuitive and practical thought are 
> two mostly orthogonal activities, and the healthiest mind has a "right" * 
 What I have found to be difficult for people (and for me as well sometimes) 
to do is to avoid labels as much as possible. Labels resulting  from 
profession, race, 
looks, possessions can be hugely misleading at worst and incomplete at best. 
They obscure the person at whom one is looking. 
  
Encountering another human being is a golden opportunity for discovery - why 
waste 
it via assumptions?! 
  
Madhav 
  
ps: so an n-dimensional space can accommodate lots of characteristics that 
might 
seem "contrary" to each other! 
  
  
 
 
 
Date:    Thu, 18 Apr 2002 18:56:33 -0700 
From:    Marisa Holmes <mariholmes@YAHOO.COM> 
Subject: Tango and Engineers - results of survey of women on the list 
  
*** "I suppose you could make a case that women are in 
professions which mimic the  skills they must have to 
follow ... social and communication skills, reaching 
out to touch someone, so to speak?" *** 
  
Well, first of all, apologies for taking a long time 
to process this information.  Life intervened. The 
original discussion that prompted me to run a little 
survey reiterated the claim that most (or at least 
many) tango dancers are engineers.  And then Ira 
Goldstein asked whether that included women dancing 
tango.  And so I posted: 
  
"  if every female reader of this list would care to 
write me and tell me what your profession or 
occupation is (and also if you ever lead or want to, 
and what country you dance in), I would be glad to 
compile the results and report.  I will also accept 
data from men about their primary usual female dance 
partner (1 per man, please!) if they are sure she will 
not answer for herself." 
  
One hundred nineteen women responded (or someone else 
responded for them).  I want to thank them for their 
generosity.  Many not only told me what they did for a 
living, they also wrote about their career paths and 
aspirations, and their ideas about how their jobs - 
and their dancing - reflect their skills and 
abilities.  Most of the women who responded are 
currently in the U.S. I also heard from 7 in Europe, 
two each in Argentina, Australia, Canada, and Turkey, 
and one in Japan. 
  
The most surprising result, to me, was how many people 
named more than one job or occupation.  Some of us are 
doing more than one job right now: with 119 people, I 
heard about 168 current jobs. Many of these are people 
who have a full-time paid job and who also run a small 
business.  Most of the part-time businesses are 
dance-related (teaching/organizing); others are craft 
or service businesses (jewelry, massage, etc.). 
Although some women gave their occupation as homemaker 
or mother, no one said specifically that she was 
working full-time and also working in her home. I'm 
guessing that a formal survey with follow-up questions 
would find a great many more part-time, unpaid jobs in 
the home, but the numbers presented here do not show 
that labor. 
  
  
Caveats 
I have grouped our occupations into general fields 
that I think make sense and which reflect sets of 
skills, psychological characteristics, predilections, 
etc., in line with the original discussion on this 
list.  These categories are (alphabetically): arts, 
business and management, crafts and trades, education, 
information and information technology, language and 
communication, people out of the paid work force, 
professional services, science, and service jobs. 
Although some patterns emerge, the sample size is too 
small to "prove" anything.  In addition, I can imagine 
a couple of other ways to sort the groups out which I 
think are equally valid (for example, I have separated 
'education' from 'communication', although 
communication is the most basic skill in education). 
In each case, I have tried to describe the jobs in 
each classification, so you can see whether the 
categories make sense to you.  I consider the results 
illuminating, but I make no claims for them beyond 
that. 
  
One additional warning about these results:  I think 
there is evidence in the responses that it  may be 
unwise to hold too tightly to the idea that the job 
(or the inclination to dance) is defined by the 
personality.  Here is a characteristic response: 
"I work as a high paid manager in government.  I have 
a  graduate degree in Spanish literature and also an 
MBA.  What category  does that put me in?" 
And, less typical, but informative in this context: 
" I'm a writer, and am working as a file clerk to make 
ends meet . I've been a project manager at a Fortune 
500 company, a waitress, a stockbroker and a brokerage 
operations clerk, a margins analyst, an actress, a 
singer of jazz and cabaret music,  a YMCA locker room 
desk clerk, a factory worker in Silicon Valley..." 
  
  
Results 
  
The original question was whether the often-repeated 
claim that tango appeals to engineers applies to 
women.  (Whether it actually applies to male dancers, 
someone else must investigate.)  The short answer is 
that it may appeal to female engineers, but most of 
the women who dance tango are not engineers.  Of the 
119 women who responded, two of them identified 
themselves as engineers, another as an electrical 
engineer, and a fourth as a software engineer.  In 
fact, most of the women who answered are in fields 
very different from engineering, as we will see: 
  
  
*** "Women who Tango - whatever their profession - are 
bright, articulate and excellent communicators (verbal 
and non-verbal).  They have to be in order to 
follow/listen to the complex lead of the dance." *** 
  
As it turned out, we could have just asked the women 
who wrote me the message above. The largest group (26% 
of the respondents) falls into the cluster I call 
language and communication.  [The following figures 
are based only on the 168 current jobs/occupations 
listed by the respondents.  In addition, the 
percentages are based on responses within a group as a 
percentage of the total number of women (119), not the 
total number of jobs (168), so the percentages total 
more than 100.]  This group includes: 
15 writers (journals, technical writers, editors, and 
fiction writers) 
7 people in advertising and marketing 
6 language teachers (3 of them teaching English as a 
second language) 
3 translators 
  
  
The sciences as a whole also employ a sizeable 
proportion of the respondents- 24% of the women who 
wrote. Here are the members of this group: 
8 in medicine (5 physicians or medical researchers, 3 
other medical personnel) 
6 in psychology or psychiatry 
4 in the hard sciences (3 chemists and a physicist) 
4 engineers (as above) 
4 in the life sciences (genetics, biology, 
oceanography, biotechnology) 
3 in the social sciences (archeology, anthropology, 
sociology) 
  
  
*** 'I am a former farm wife, ongoing stained glass 
artist, trying to promote Argentine Tango, but my 
rotary badge says "entrepreneur".' *** 
  
Business and management jobs were held by 18% of the 
respondents: 
6 administrators (  academic administrators, office 
administrators, clerks) 
5 managers (3 for non-profit organizations or 
government, 2 for trade organizations) 
2 consultants 
A substantial number of the women responding to my 
question (27) run small businesses. I have listed most 
of them elsewhere - the craftswomen in crafts, the 
dance instructors in arts, the computer-related 
business owners in information, etc.  Nine business 
owners remain whose work I did not manage to fit into 
another category: 
3 spa/beauty products/massage businesses 
2 shoe businesses  (ah - tango!) 
4 others (court reporter, dog grooming, real estate 
rental, tourist services) 
  
  
*** " and I teach tango ( of course I spend more money 
learning it and dancing it  than I make teaching it.)" 
*** 
  
The next three largest groups (13% each) are the arts, 
the crafts, and the information professions.  Women in 
the arts include: 
8 performers (some part- and some full-time.  6 tango 
dancers, 1 actress, 1 musician) 
5 dance instructors 
3 others (TV producer, events planner, arts 
management) 
There are many women, of course, who have a deep 
interest in the arts who do not appear in this count, 
and this must reflect to some extent the difficulty of 
making a living as a performer or of living an 
acceptable life if one is a performer.   One woman 
wrote: "I'm an electronics engineer who used to do 
ballet."  I keep thinking that if everyone could do 
the job they felt called to we would be able to draw 
more conclusions about personality (and maybe how 
likely it is that the members of certain professions 
would have an interest in tango).  As it is, many 
people clearly do the job they find by some sort of 
chance. 
  
  
Crafts and trades - 13 %: 
4 jewelers (most also describe themselves as business 
owners) 
3 graphic artists (illustrator, photographer, make-up 
artist) 
3 architects 
6 others (baker, bookbinder, hose remodeler, clothing 
and toy designer, stained glass artist, interior 
designer) 
  
  
Information and information technology careers 
accounted for 15 respondents (13%): 
10 computer professionals (4 systems administrators or 
support people, 4 software developers, 2 owners of 
computer-related businesses) 
5 librarians 
  
  
*** "Hi, Marisa, 
Does household engineer count?" *** 
  
Another 12% of the respondents are currently out of 
the paid workforce.  As we know, there are four job 
statuses in which people are commonly not being paid 
for their labor, and one of those is much more common 
for men than for women.  Current occupations among the 
respondents include all four: 
3 students 
6 full-time homemakers or parents 
2 in transition between jobs 
3 retired 
  
  
Education - 9 %: 
9 academics of various sorts 
2 K-12 teachers 
This is the category which showed the greatest 
difference between the number of people who have ever 
worked in the field and the number currently working 
in it.  With fewer than half the respondents giving 
information on jobs they held before, there were seven 
people who said they had taught at the K-12 levels - 
and only two still doing so. 
  
  
Professional services.  7 %.  I am a little reluctant 
to group these together, as they represent two 
different skill sets - you can take the classification 
with a grain of salt: 
5 financial professionals (2 accountants, bookkeeper, 
insurance agent, bank employee) 
3 lawyers 
  
  
Service jobs - 3%: 
These jobs are not common in the group of women who 
responded, although many who talked about their work 
histories mentioned having held them in the past. 
This reflects in part the remuneration for service 
work, which may well not pay for a hobby like tango. 
The respondent who specified that this job was her 
career indicated that she has worked in a series of 
upscale establishments where her communication skills 
are essential to her success.  For the other 
respondents, current and past service jobs have tended 
to be part-time and temporary: 
2 waitresses 
1 retail sales 
  
  
So - does tango appeal to engineers?  Maybe, but it 
also appeals to a lot of women whose jobs are nothing 
at all like engineering.  A number of people told me 
they had no idea about the occupations of their fellow 
dancers, but some women clearly have employed their 
communication skills within their communities.  One 
respondent, who was absolutely correct, wrote: "The 
women that I dance with range from Doctor, dressmaker, 
artists (lots of artists) real estate agents, personal 
coach, therapists, Psychologists, teachers, students, 
home care workers, housecleaners, architect and last 
but not least homemakers/ fulltime mums."  Why didn't 
I just ask her? 
  
  
A Leading Question 
One final note: I had asked, as a matter of personal 
interest, for women to tell me if they lead as well as 
follow.  There were four types of responses.  Most 
people did not mention leading at all; they either 
don't lead, missed the question, or were not 
interested in the question.  A handful (4) specified 
that they lead in class if necessary or lead to teach, 
but never lead socially.  Eighteen women (15% of the 
respondents) told me they do lead or want to learn. 
This group includes women in several fields, but none 
in arts, education, service jobs, or out of the paid 
work force (for this calculation retirees were 
included in their previous professions).  It does 
include 25 % of the women in crafts and 33% of those 
in the information professions (a LAN administrator, a 
UNIX programmer, a software engineer, and two 
librarians).  Six women felt strongly enough about the 
issue that they wrote to tell me they did not lead; 2 
scientists, 2 language/communications workers, a 
business type, and a woman out of the paid work force. 
  
  
Cheers! 
Marisa 
  
  
  
 
    
Continue to Sonic reprocessing and electronic DJs |
ARTICLE INDEX 
     
 |  
 |