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Gender

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Title: Gender


1
Gender
2
  • Two Primary Issues
  • The Cultural construction of Gender
  • Gender Relations

3
Sex Versus Gender
  • Sex refers to biological differences,
  • Gender refers to the cultural construction of
    male and female characteristics.
  • The ways members of the two sexes are
    perceived, evaluated and expected to behave.

(what different cultures make of sex.)
4
  • Gender Boundaries
  • We demand that the categories of male and female
    be discrete
  • since gender is culturally constructed the
    boundaries are conceptual rather than physical
  • the boundaries are dynamic, eg. now it is
    acceptable for men to wear earrings.
  • Boundaries require markers to indicate gender
    such as
  • Voice
  • Physique
  • Dress
  • Behaviour
  • Hair style
  • Kinetics
  • Language use

5
Gender identity
Why is it important
How do we react when someone seems to have traits
of each category?
social intercourse requires that the interacting
parties know to which gender category the other'
belongs
Felicita Vestvali1824 - 1880
New York opera star who specialized in singing
contralto "trouser roles."
6
Is he a he? Or is he a she? Or is she a he? How
does your reaction to this image compare to the
earlier one of a woman dressed as a man? Is
there a double standard?
7
Women cross dress all the time. The difference
is perception. Acceptance or Rejection by society
8
The Relativity of Gender
If the categories man' and woman' are
culturally constructed what are the implications?
  • There can be no universal meaning to the category
    woman or man.
  • What it means to be a man or a woman in a
    particular society is relative to that society.
  • we do not have to be restricted to two genders

Cross-dressing often retains clues to the
underlying gender base and the resulting image
appears to exist somewhere between the polarities
of male and female containing elements of both
as if a third gender had been created.
9
Third Genders
  • transsexual gender/ sex incongruent, trapped
    in wrong body but with the gender identity of
    their organs/sex change operation
  • transvestite dressing as other gender,
    biological sex (cross-dresser)
  • homosexual
  • bisexual
  • eunuch castrated male
  • hermaphrodite both sets of biological organs
  • Virgin?
  • Boy/Girl?

10
The Hijras of India and Pakistan
  • Hijra means impotent ones in Urdu
  • Some are born hermaphrodite, most are born with a
    male body but with a feminine gender identity and
    undergo voluntary castration
  • Hijras wear colourful womens clothes and prefer
    men or other hijras as sexual partners
  • Perceived neither as men nor women but as a third
    gender
  • estimates range from 50,000 to 5,000,000 in India.

11
  • A third gender has existed in the Indian
    subcontinent from the earliest Vedic period (2000
    BCE), and throughout the history of Hinduism
  • They are also viewed as the cultural descendants
    of the court eunuchs of the Islamic Mughal Empire
    (1526-1858)
  • typically live together in a traditional commune
    arrangement of five or more "chelas" (disciples),
    supervised by a "guru." (teacher)
  • Unrecognized in law as either male or female they
    face extreme discrimination in health, housing,
    education, employment.

12
  • Hijras now earn their living as beggars,
    prostitutes and by dancing at carnivals, weddings
    and births that require their blessing

getting dressed for a job entertaining at a
wedding
  • Hijras are both feared for their supposed ability
    to place curses, and pitied for being outcast
    children of Allah.
  • Believed to hold great power because of their
    worship of the Hindu Mother Goddess - Mata
    Bahuchara

Blessing a newborn
13
  • have recently modelled designer clothes at upbeat
    fashion shows
  • And begun training as beauticians
  • faced with health concerns and discrimination,
    many have become politically active
  • A few hijras have been elected to high political
    positions (1st Hijra MP elected 1999)

14
Berdache
George Catlin (1796-1872)Dance to the
BerdacheDrawn while on the Great Plains, among
the Sac and Fox Indians, the sketch depicts a
ceremonial dance to celebrate the two-spirit
person. The men tease him but vie for his
recognition, which is deemed an honor.
  • Common among many native N. American groups
  • In everyday life the two-spirit male typically
    would wear womens clothes and do womens work.
  • He would be accepted as one of the girls. He
    might take a husband, or might have affairs with
    several men.
  • Generally two-spirit males were not expected to
    have sexual relations with women.

15
  • Multigendered people were/are usually presumed to
    be people of power.
  • Because they have both maleness and femaleness in
    one body, they are thought to be able to see
    with the eyes of both men and women.
  • They are often called upon to be healers, or
    mediators, or interpreters of dreams.
  • Besides their spiritual abilities, their capacity
    for work also figured into the high status of
    two-spirit people.
  • Even though a two-spirit male would have taken on
    the gender identity of a woman, he would still
    have the endurance and strength of a man

We'wha (1849-96), a Zuni berdache, lived in New
Mexico. He is shown holding a ritual vessel,
dressed in women's clothing.
16
  • Western societies label third sexes and genders a
    problem and therefore feel compelled to fix
    them
  • Deification, ostracization, and medicalization
    are common coping strategies for societies with
    strong gender dichotomies, and are often based on
    reproductive potential
  • These systems do not always have to be harmful to
    the third gendered/sexed individual, but often
    are
  • As we move out of an age where reproduction was
    our main purpose in life maybe we need to revise
    and expand our ideas about how gender and sex
    roles work with each other

17
Is it possible to have a genderless society?
18
Gender roles
  • tasks and activities a culture assigns to the
    sexes expected ways of behaving based on
    societys definition of masculine and feminine
  • Gender stereotypes
  • oversimplified but strongly held ideas of the
    characteristics of men and women.
  • Gender stratification
  • an unequal distribution of rewards (socially
    valued resources, power, prestige, and personal
    freedom) between men and women, reflecting their
    different positions in social hierarchy a
    division in society where all members are
    hierarchically ranked according to gender
  • Gender ideology
  • A system of thoughts and values that legitimizes
    sex roles, statuses and customary behaviour

19
Gender roles
20
ROSIE THE RIVETER All the day long,Whether rain
or shine,She's a part of the assembly
line.She's making history,Working for
victory,Rosie the Riveter.Keeps a sharp lookout
for sabatoge,Sitting up there on the
fuselage.That little girl will do more than a
male will do.Rosie's got a boyfriend,
Charlie.Charlie, he's a Marine.Rosie is
protecting Charlie,Working overtime on the
riveting machine.When they gave her a production
"E,"She was as proud as she could be.There's
something true about,Red, white, and blue
about,Rosie the Riveter.
Gender Roles
Redd Evans and John Jacob Loeb,"Rosie the
Riveter," (New York Paramount Music Corp., 1942
21
In the 1940s, women were encouraged to help the
war effort by getting a job outside the home. But
it was family and country rather than money,
status, or power that they were encouraged to
toil for .
Coke 1942
For whether she rears a family or mans a
rangefinder, a woman needs the physical support
of a good foundation." and "Amongst other
munitions of war, Berlei are still making
foundations.". 
November 1942
22
1950s - mass consumption in high gear, TV ads
idealized the woman as the wife and homemaker,
and the man as the bread winner.
But also the sex kitten
23
Cascade Dishwashing Detergent 1958 issue of
Lady's Home Journal.  The man in this
advertisement is envious of his hostess' spotless
drinking glasses.  Rather than giving him advice
on how to get his glasses just as clear, she
advises him to tell his wife to use
Cascade.   The designers of this ad assume that
washing dishes is a woman's chore.  The roles are
strictly defined it never crosses the woman's
mind that Jean's husband might have something to
do with dishwashing in his household. 
24
1960s Educated women started exhibiting their
discontent with the status quo. Armed with
diplomas and new sophisticated birth control
methods, they demanded for the right to have both
career and family. The great social change in the
sixties allowed a variety of depictions of women
sex kitten, nurturing mother and independent
working girl.
1970s Issues like woman's lib, ethnic heritage,
and critiques of capitalism. Women are shown as
independent only when inexpensive items or simple
decisions were involved Advertisers realized that
not just white people were buying products.
Ethnic people were placed in advertisements.
25
1980s independent woman freedom
26
1990s 2000s She is a "multifaceted success
machine. She is a nurturer and a seducer. She
is the twenty-four hour a day woman, and she
never sleeps. Men are domesticated. Sex objects
27
Images of women improving?
  • From June 1999 issue of Glamour
  • Part of an ad campaign that accompanied the
    Womens World Cup
  • You pass on more to your children
  • and your grandchildren than your eye color, . . .
    You provide the living example that they can
    become more than they ever thought they could.
    Because you did.
  • Just do it.

28
This ad is striking because it shows a man in
what is typically thought of as a womans
role. What does the fact that he can open the
pail without passing out say about men?
29
What Men and Women Really Think
  • What do the models thoughts suggest?
  • What does this say about the roles of women? And
    of Men?

Crutchfield Catalog for audio and video
equipment.
30
Gender Stereotypes
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A woman walked into the kitchen to find her
husband stalking around with a fly swatter.she
"What are you doing?" he "Hunting Flies" she
"Oh. Killing any? he "Yep, 3 males, 2 Females,"

she Intrigued, "How can you tell them
apart?"he "3 were on a beer can, 2 were on the
phone."
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Why are these cartoons humorous?
37
Be a Man
What does this statement mean? What comes to mind
  • Men never cry
  • Should not show emotion
  • Not quitters
  • Physically brave
  • Independent
  • Heroic and patriotic ideals
  • Adventurous
  • Shaving
  • First day at work - earning a wage
  • Initiations
  • tough
  • Courageous
  • Drinking
  • Physical strength
  • Sex

38
Masculine Traits
Personality Cognitive Physical
Competitive Rational Rugged
Daring Analytical Muscular
Adventurous Problem Solving Phys. Strong
Aggressive Quant. Skilled Handsome
Courageous Good Reasoning Phys. Vigorous
Dominant Mathematical Brawny
self promotion achievement
Do you Agree?
How has this Changed during the past few years?
39
Men are Supposed to be Strong
  • What message does this ad send to men? Women?
  • Do we usually see more scantily clad men or
    women?
  • Is this what a man looks like? Should men look
    like this? Why or why not?
  • Where do our ideals of beauty come from?

40
Act like a Lady
What does this phrase mean? What comes to mind?
41
Feminine Traits
Personality Cognitive Physical
Affectionate Imaginative Cute
Sympathetic Intuitive Gorgeous
Gentle Artistic Beautiful
Sensitive Creative Pretty
Supportive Expressive Petite
Kind Tasteful Sexy
focus on others, community
How has this changed in the past few years?
42
Victorias Secret is Revealed
  • What does this ad suggest women should look like?
  • Are these women, Acting like Ladies? How / Why
    or why not?
  • The current ideal of female beauty is difficult
    to achieve. The ideal being a young Caucasian
    female, height 5'8"- 5'10", weighing 110-120
    pounds or less. Make-up, lighting and
    air-brushing are used to slim down the images
    even more. Less than 10 of the female population
    are genetically destined to fit this ideal.

Victorias Secret, Angels Collection
43
Healthy Women
  • What does this ad suggest about women? About men?
  • Why arent the men drinking the orange juice?

44
Dove Evolution Slob Evolution
45
Changing beauty standards
  • In 1957, Miss America was 5'7" and weighed 150
    pounds.
  • In 2002 Miss America was 5'9 " and weighed 117
    pounds

Marian McKnight Manning, S.Carolina
Katie Harman Gresham, Oregon
46
  • Recent advertising trends are just as harmful to
    men
  • Unforgiving unrealistic images
  • Mens magazines encourage obsession with body
    image, aging sexual prowess

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Gender Relations
49
  • Gender is an important dimension of social
    inequality
  • Gender stratification frequently takes the form
    of patriarchy whereby men dominate women
  • Do women in our society have a second class
    status relative to men?
  • If so How?
  • How do we measure gender stratification?

50
How do we measure gender stratification? .
  • Economics
  • Politics
  • Religion
  • Legal rights
  • prestige
  • Autonomy
  • Education
  • Employment
  • Health
  • ideology
  • How deferential they are expected to be towards
    men.
  • Freedom to choose marriage partner, profession,
    and conception. Etc.
  • We can also look at the roles played by women and
    the value society places on them roles
  • Generally Differential access to Wealth, Power,
    and Prestige

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Labor Force Participation for U.S. Women and Men,
aged 25-55 1950-2000
  • Womens increased participation in paid work is a
    central change in gender relations over the last
    50 years.
  • Labor force participation is often seen as the
    prime indicator (and cause) of changes in womens
    status.
  • Social theory often focuses on womens employment
    because employment determines access to resources
    and ability to make independent decisions.

58
Gender Stratification
  • unequal distribution of wealth, power and
    prestige between men and women
  • In the 1970s it was argued that women are
    universally subordinate to men in political,
    economic, and public life
  • i.e cultures everywhere give man, as a category
    opposed to women, higher social value and moral
    worth.
  • Is the secondary status of women a cultural
    universal?

59
Womens Power in Global Perspective
60
Are women universally or always subordinate to
men?
61
Explanations for the Universal subordination of
Women
  • 1. The biological argument
  • women's status relative to men is natural and due
    to biological differences
  • Mens testosterone naturally leads them to be
    more aggressive Womens oestrogen makes them more
    compliant
  • Women are biologically programmed to bear and
    raise children which affects their economic roles
  • Can these differences explain male aggression
  • juvenile delinquency, for violent crime in
    general
  • the biological basis of warfare
  • the political and economic dominance of men

62
  1. Biologically men are physically stronger than
    women
  2. therefore this results in a sexual division of
    labour with men doing the harder work
  3. In other words biology influences behaviour
  4. implies that the relationship between biology and
    social life is one of cause and effect.

If biology explains the political and economic
dominance of men must we not simply accept that
fact?
63
So much for that theory --- in many societies
women are the real labourers
biological differences cannot provide a universal
basis for social definitions of man' and woman'
64
  • 2. Envy theory
  • men may have political control but women have
    the power of life - giving birth
  • Men may arrange or exchange legal rights over
    women's offspring, but the power of creating life
    and sustaining it by breast milk remains beyond
    their grasp.
  • i.e. men are envious
  • again linked to biology
  • 3. Psychological
  • boys try to dominate others
  • girls comply with parents
  • again linked with biology

65
But so what
  • it is true, generally men are physically stronger
    than women
  • this may account for some of the division of
    labour
  • But nothing in the biological differences between
    the sexes can account for the secondary status of
    women
  • what is important is the different values placed
    on being a man or a woman or on the work that is
    done
  • An alternative explanation is that there must be
    some cultural or sociological regularities that
    account for male dominance.
  • the inequalities are due to the fact that
    societies place different values on biological
    sex
  • and apparently universally value female sex lower
    than male sex

66
Children's socialization or Gender Typing
  • both sexes must learn behavior that is deemed
    appropriate to their gender
  • girls from their mother's model
  • a boy with his father

67
Female is to domestic as male is to public
The domestic/public opposition is ultimately
derived from woman's role as mother and rearer of
children.
  • i.e. identification with the domestic domain is
    seen as a consequence of their role as mothers
  • has tended to limit them to certain social
    functions
  • i.e. with the rearing of children

68
  • Since women are confined to the domestic context,
    their main sphere of activity becomes familial
    relations
  • i.e. women's roles centres around the hearth and
    home.
  • domestic are those institutions and activities
    organized around mother-child groups

69
  • men, however, operate in the political and
    public domain of social life.
  • they are free to form those broader associations
    that we call society'
  • Men thus become identified with society and the
    public interest
  • The domestic sphere is considered less important
    than the public domain
  • Since women are associated with the domestic
    sphere and men the public, women are of lower and
    men of higher value.

70
Is the domestic sphere devalued in our society?
  • in Western society the family and the domestic
    are conceived in opposition to the public sphere
    of life, business, work and politics
  • but this cannot be considered universal
  • this domestic/public association it appears is a
    Western construct.
  • These ideas derived from Western thought has
    been imposed on other cultural situations where
    it does is not always apply

71
  • The Hagen of New Guinea
  • do associate women with the domestic realm and
    men with the public sphere
  • pursuing socially valued goals is acting like a
    man
  • pursuing individual family interests is acting
    like a woman
  • but these types of behaviour are open to both
    men and women
  • the association of the domestic with something
    demeaning or less than social is not a feature of
    Hagen thought.

72
Margaret Mead
  • Sex and Temperament in Three Primitive Societies
    (1935)
  • Male and Female (1949).
  • sought to discover extent temperamental
    differences between the sexes were culturally
    determined rather than innate biological
  • Mead found a different pattern of male and
    female behavior in each of the cultures she
    studied, all different from gender role
    expectations in the United States at that time.

73
The gentle mountain-dwelling Arapesh
  • Arapesh child-rearing responsibilities evenly
    divided among men and women - both nurturing

The fierce cannibalistic Mundugumor
  • a natural hostility exists between all members of
    the same sex. Mundugumor fathers and sons, and
    mothers and daughters were adversaries - both
    aggressive

The graceful headhunters of Tchambuli,
  • While men were preoccupied with arts, gossiping,
    hair, the women had the real power, controlling
    fishing and manufacturing,

74
  • Relativist Position
  • in the non-western world we find cultural
    ideologies that
  • subordinate and exclude women,
  • extract their labour and child-bearing and
    rearing and
  • place them under the legal control of their
    fathers, brothers and husbands
  • ideologies which are supported as vehemently by
    women as by men.

Their religion may consign women to domestic
roles and labour to enhance male prestige But
women portray themselves in terms of virtue and
duty.
75
  • men and women, may be equally committed to a
    system of rules and meanings
  • even though it gives power and advantage to some
    of them and subordinates others.
  • Can we legitimately step outside this system and
    view it as an ideology without simply imposing
    our ideology on them.

76
  • In other words even though we can see the
    injustice of the system which polarize the sexes
    and demean women
  • It does not mean that women live in these
    societies with the strain, conflict, or negative
    self-images one would expect them to entail
  • Women are actors
  • women may themselves become important political
    actors who
  • influence the public political affairs of men
    from behind the scenes
  • pursue strategies of controlling labour and
    prestige within the constraints of the system.

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