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Pajamas for three-month-old girls and boys are seen at a Target store in Waterloo, Ont., on Sunday Sept. 28, 2014. The photograph has sparked a social media debate about gender stereotyping of babies.Christine Logel/The Canadian Press

Hundreds of people have denounced Target for selling "sexist" baby pyjamas after a university professor posted a photograph of the clothing on social media.

The boy clothing features a Superman logo and the line, "Future Man of Steel," while the girl item has the same logo but the line: "I Only Date Heroes."

"It seems kind of ridiculous to talk about who an infant girl is going to date," said Aimee Morrison, an associate professor of English at the University of Waterloo.

"Even for tiny babies, we seem to think of girls as gaining power and worth from whom they're romantically linked to and boys get to become agents of action in their own right."

The photograph was taken on the weekend at a local Target store by Ms. Morrison's friend, Christine Logel, an associate social development professor at the university.

Ms. Logel was out shopping for toys for her two daughters, ages 3 and 8, when she saw the sleepers made for three-month-olds.

"My heart really sank," said Ms. Logel, a social psychologist by training. "I'm tired of seeing these messages everywhere." The assistant store manager thought they were "cute," she said.

Ms. Logel initially put the picture of the pyjamas on Facebook but gained little traction. The women then decided to share the image on Ms. Morrison's Twitter account, sparking hundreds of retweets and comments.

The response was overwhelmingly opposed to gender stereotyping, with many responders passing along their own examples. One person sent her a photograph of a similar set, with one shirt saying, "Training to be Batman," and the other saying, "Training to be Batman's Wife." Another said she found the same Target outfits in New Brunswick.

The point, said Ms. Morrison, is the stereotyping found in the Target clothing was not an isolated occurrence.

"They were really very easily and very quickly able to send me picture after picture that demonstrated this deeply held but not explicitly discussed bias to thinking about girls and women in terms of their sexual currency and men in terms of their capacity to conquest," she said.

Target refused to discuss the issue but released a statement saying it "strives to treat all our guests with respect, and it is never our intent to offend anyone."

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