Designer Receives Award And Backlash For Her Anti-Manspreading Chair

An Anti-Manspreading Chair?

A design student is getting some mixed signals after she created chairs to discourage manspreading.

Laila Laurel, from Norwich, recently received a big award after she made two chairs. One discourages men from spreading their legs too wide while sitting, while the other encourages women to do the opposite.

Laurel ended up winning the Belmond Award at New Designers in London. The award, which includes a £1,000 prize and the chance to design a product for a hotel and leisure company, is one of the top honors at the showcase which spotlights work from universities across the UK.

Laurel says she came up with the idea as “more of a concept and not necessarily a functional design” after she had multiple experiences of men “infringing on my space in public.” She also cited The Everyday Sexism Project, founded by Laura Bates, as partial inspiration. The project collects women’s daily experiences of gender inequality.

She added:

“I don't take myself too seriously, because I really want my work to be both important and thought-provoking, whilst also being engaging and funny.

“I think humour is a really interesting tool in order to tackle social issues.”

Online Pushback

But not everyone finds Laurel’s creation fun or enlightening. In fact, many people online, mostly men, are very angry at her for coming up with the chair. From YouTubers to internet commenters online, people have expressed their distaste for the chairs. That’s especially true for the anti-manspreading chair.

“I have received a lot of explicit messages from men who seem to be under the impression that I hate all men,” Laila Laurel noted, according to the BBC News. The University of Brighton student said that “couldn't be further from the truth frankly.”

She then elaborated, while talking to British program Sunday Morning Live, that she’s received some pretty hateful messages because of the chair.

“There has been a lot of backlash online from them… Mostly men. People online being really rude. Telling me that maybe the world would be a better place if I jumped off a tall bridge.”

No matter your thoughts on the seats, to send the student death threats or wishes for her death is deplorable. But Laurel says she’s learned from the hate.

“It was super discouraging and quite hard at the beginning,” she told the tv program. “But I think I’m beginning to realize that when you’re tackling social issues or trying to discuss them, especially ones that tend to be quite polarizing such as gender politics, you do tend to step on people’s toes. And the people that have been messaging me may be a small portion of the population and really the ones who want to spread hate, and so it’s maybe not worth having a dialogue with them.”

This anti-manspreading chair does not have a lot of fans, but it’s definitely starting conversations around manspreading and gender equality. And while we might not all be fans of the chairs, we can appreciate the creator’s bravery in confronting the hate.

About Devin Jackson Randall 566 Articles
Geek by chance, and an artist by birth. Devin is a journalist and blogger who's always glad to share insights and developments on men's issues. Aside from news stories, he often writes about the roles placed upon men by society, and how both affect the relationships around us. Click on the hyperlinked text to follow him on --> Twitter. Email him at --> [email protected]

3 Comments

  1. The world should completely overhaul the way chairs are made and make male- and female-specific seating. That way people will no longer complain about a certain gender sitting down in a seat, when they will be designated 50% to each gender. No I will not give you my seat because I am male, you don’t want to sit in this chair. Nobody does. I’m sitting here because it’s been a long day for me too. I am completely for the idea of women in skirts sitting in a pro-spread eagle chair. Thank you for creating more gender specific things in a world where equality is a grey area.

  2. Ridiculous, and the hypocrisy is strong. She calls men rude yet she made this chair.

  3. Uh, but what keeps people from just using the opposite chair? Also why do you think women want to spread our legs when we sit? We don’t have anything hanging there that would make that uncomfortable.

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