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Introduction to Sociology SOC-101

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Introduction to Sociology SOC-101 Unit 10 Sex, Gender, and Age The Functionalist Perspective Functionalists examine age from the standpoint of how those persons ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to Sociology SOC-101


1
Introduction to SociologySOC-101
  • Unit 10 Sex, Gender, and Age

2
Issues of Sex and Gender
  • Gender stratification refers to the unequal (or
    differing) access to power, prestige, and
    property possessed by men and by women
  • Sex and gender reflect different bases for
    stratification
  • Sex
  • Biological characteristics distinguishing males
    and females
  • Primary sex organs (organs related to
    reproduction)
  • Secondary sex organs (physical distinctions not
    related to reproduction)

3
Issues of Sex and Gender
  • Gender
  • A social characteristic, and its impact varies
    from one society to another
  • It refers to the behaviors and attitudes the
    group considers proper for its males and females.
  • The sociological significance of gender is that
    it serves as a sorting device by which society
    controls its members and thus is a structural
    feature of society

4
Issues of Sex and Gender
  • There is disagreement as to what produces gender
    differences in behavior.
  • Some researchers argue that biological factors
    (two X chromosomes in females, one X and one Y in
    males) result in differences in the behavior of
    males (more aggressive and domineering) and
    females (more comforting and nurturing)
  • The dominant sociological position is that gender
    differences result from sex being used to mark
    people for special treatment
  • Males and females then take on the relative
    positions that society assigns to them

5
Issues of Sex and Gender
  • Alice Rossi suggested that women are better
    prepared biologically than men for mothering
  • Nature provides biological predispositions that
    are overlaid with culture preferences
  • Medical accidents and studies such as the one
    involving Vietnam veterans suggest that the
    relationship between biology and social learning
    is a complex one
  • Example one child in 1963 was forced to have a
    sex change operation after a botch circumcision
    burned off his penis
  • Child was raised as a girl and behaved like a
    girl
  • Example study of Vietnam Veterans showed that
    men who had higher testosterone were more
    aggressive and tend to have more problems than
    men with lower levels

6
  • Gender Inequality

7
Gender Inequality
  • Around the world, gender is the primary division
    between people
  • Every society sets up barriers to deny women
    equal access
  • They are therefore referred to as a minority even
    though they outnumber men
  • Although the origin of patriarchy (male
    dominance) is unknown, one theory points to the
    social consequences of human reproduction
  • As a result of pregnancy and breast-feeding,
    women were limited for much of their lives and
    they assumed the tasks associated with the home
    and child care

8
Gender Inequality
  • Men took over those tasks requiring greater speed
    and longer absences such as hunting animals
  • This enabled men to make contact with other
    tribes and to wage war
  • Male prestige resulted from their accumulation of
    possessions through trade and war with other
    groups
  • Little prestige was given to womens routine
    tasks, in part because they were not perceived as
    risking their lives for the group
  • Eventually men took over society, using their
    weapons, possessions, and knowledge to guarantee
    that they held more social power than did women

9
Gender Inequality
  • There is no way to test this theory because the
    answers lie buried in history
  • There may be many different causes other than the
    biology of human reproduction
  • Marvin Harris argued that in prehistoric times,
    each group was threatened with annihilation by
    other groups
  • They had to recruit members to fight enemies in
    dangerous, hand-to-hand combat
  • Bigger and stronger men were coaxed into this
    bravery by promises of rewardssexual access to
    females

10
Gender Inequality
  • Frederick Engels suggested that male dominance
    developed in society with the emergence of
    private property
  • However, he did not explain the connection
  • Today, male dominance is a continuation of
    millennia-old patterns

11
  • Gender Inequality in the U.S.

12
Gender Inequality in the U.S.
  • Womens rights resulted from a prolonged and
    bitter struggle.
  • U.S. women could not vote, own property, or serve
    on a jury until the 20th century
  • Males did not willingly surrender these
    privileges, but used social institutions to
    maintain their position
  • Feminism
  • The view that biology is not destiny and that
    gender stratification is wrong and should be
    resisted
  • This met with strong opposition

13
Gender Inequality in the U.S.
  • The first wave of the womens movement had a
    radical and conservative branches
  • Radicals wanted to reform all social institutions
  • Conservative branch concentrated on winning the
    vote for women and thus dominated
  • Both branches of the movement more or less
    disappeared after suffrage was achieved
  • The second wave began in the 1960s
  • Its goals ranged from changing womens work roles
    to changing policies on violence against women
  • While women enjoy more rights today, gender
    inequality still exists

14
Gender Inequality in the U.S.
  • Researchers have found sex discrimination in the
    area of medicine and health care
  • Physicians sometimes dismiss the complaints of
    female patients as not serious
  • This neglect could be a matter of life and death
  • One example is in the area of diagnosing and
    treating heart disease
  • Physicians regard womens reproductive organs as
    potentially disease producing and largely
    unnecessary after childbearing years
  • They frequently recommend their removal
  • Surgeons make a lot of money from the unnecessary
    removal of these organs

15
Gender Inequality in the U.S.
  • Despite evidence of the educational gains made by
    women some traditionally male-female distinctions
    persist
  • In college, males and females are channeled into
    different fields
  • 90 of library science associate degrees are
    awarded to females
  • 95 percent of associate degrees in construction
    trades are awarded to males
  • The proportion of females decreases in
    postgraduate work, though this too is slowly
    changing
  • There is also gender stratification in both the
    rank and pay within higher educational
    institutions.
  • Women at all levels are paid less than their male
    counterparts
  • Changes are taking place
  • The proportion of professional degrees earned by
    women has increased in recent years

16
  • Changes in College Enrollment by Sex

17
Gender Inequality in the U.S.
  • There have been significant changes in the
    workforce as the number of working women has
    increased
  • However, discrimination against women is still
    very visible
  • In 1900, one in five workers was female today it
    is almost one in two
  • Women who work full-time average only 72 percent
    of what men are paid despite their level of
    educational achievement
  • This is true even when they have more
    qualifications than their male counterparts
  • Half of this pay gap results from women entering
    the work force in lower-paying jobs

18
Gender Inequality in the U.S.
  • The glass ceiling describes an invisible
    barrier that women face in the work force
  • Men, who dominate the executive suites,
    stereotype potential leaders as people who look
    like themselves
  • In addition, women lack mentors as male
    executives are reluctant to get close to female
    subordinates because they fear gossip and sexual
    harassment charges, or they believe that women
    are weak
  • In recent years women who are highly motivated,
    fiercely competitive, and play by mens rules,
    have begun to crack the glass ceiling

19
Gender Inequality in the U.S.
  • Until the 1970s, women did not draw a connection
    between unwanted sexual advances on the job and
    their subordinate positions at work
  • But as women began to discuss the problem, they
    named it and came to see unwanted sexual advances
    by men in powerful positions as a structural
    problem
  • The change resulted from reinterpreting womens
    experiences and giving them a name

20
Gender Inequality in the U.S.
  • As more women move into positions of authority
    over men, the problem of sexual harassment is no
    longer exclusively a female problem
  • Ongoing court cases have resulted in changes as
    to what is and is not included within the legal
    definition of sexual harassment
  • The Court has ruled that sexual harassment laws
    also apply to homosexuals who are harassed by
    heterosexuals on the job

21
Gender Inequality in the U.S.
  • Women are more likely to be victims of violence
    than men
  • Every year in the United States, 0.59 of every
    10,000 females is raped
  • The typical rapist is under the age of 30
  • Of increased concern today is the widespread
    incidence of date rape
  • Studies show that only 5 percept of date rape
    cases at universities are reported
  • Males are more likely to commit murder than
    females, and males commit 89 percent of the
    murders involving women victims

22
Gender Inequality in the U.S.
  • Women are also disproportionate victims of family
    violence and of genital circumcision
  • Feminists use symbolic interactionism to
    understand violence against women
  • They stress that U.S. culture promotes violence
    by males as it teaches men to associate power,
    dominance, strength, virility, and superiority
    with masculinity
  • Men use violence in an attempt to maintain a
    higher status
  • To solve violence we must first break the link
    between violence and masculinity
  • Could be done through educational programs in
    schools, churches, homes, and the media

23
  • Changing Face of Politics

24
The Changing Face of Politics
  • Despite the gains U.S. women have made in recent
    elections, they continue to be underrepresented
    in political office, especially in higher office
  • Trends from the 1990s indicated that women
    participated in political life in greater numbers
    than in the past
  • Indicators that things will change include
  • More women going into careers in law and business
  • Traveling and establishing wider networks of
    support
  • Fact that child care is increasingly seen as the
    mutual responsibility of both parents

25
The Changing Face of Politics
  • As women play a more full role in society, the
    structural obstacles to womens participation
    will give way
  • Relationships between men and women will change
    and some of the distinctions between the sexes
    will disappear
  • The goal is greater appreciation of sexual
    differences coupled with increased equality of
    opportunity

26
  • Aging

27
Aging in Global Perspective
  • Every society must deal with the process of
    people aging
  • The Tiwi (Australia) have a custom of covering
    up aged women who have become too feeble to look
    after themselves
  • They dig a hole, place the elderly woman in it,
    cover her body with dirt, and leave her to die
  • In their culture, when the woman is later found
    dead, it is from natural causesshe has died
    because she is too old and frail to dig herself
    out of the hole and survive

28
Aging in Global Perspective
  • In Abkhasia (Caucasus region), the people
    commonly live to be 100, or even older
  • Possible reasons for their longevity include
  • Diet and eating customs (overeating is considered
    dangerous)
  • Lifelong physical activity (they dont begin to
    slow down until age 80)
  • Social integration (the elderly are active,
    valued, contributing members of the society,
    never isolated from family and community)
  • This reveals an important sociological principle
  • Aging is socially constructed
  • Attitudes towards aging are rooted in society and
    therefore differ from one social group to the next

29
Aging in Global Perspective
  • In industrialized nations, life expectancy
    increases because of a more plentiful food
    supply, a safer water supply, and the control of
    certain diseases
  • As the elderly population increases, so does the
    cost of meeting their particular needs
  • This has become a major social issue in the Most
    Industrialized Nations as the young members face
    a growing tax burden to pay for benefits to the
    elderly
  • In the Least Industrialized Nations, there are no
    social security taxes and families are expected
    to take care of their own elderly

30
Aging in Global Perspective
  • The graying of America refers to the proportion
    of older persons in the U.S. population
  • Almost 13 percent of the population has achieved
    age 65
  • The maximum length of life, the life span, has
    not increased

31
  • Theoretical Perspectives on Aging

32
The Symbolic Interactionist Perspective
  • Robert Butler coined the term ageism to refer
    to prejudice, discrimination, and hostility
    directed at people because of their age
  • In U.S. society today, the general image of old
    age is negative, but researchers have found that
    at one time, old age had some positive meanings
  • Few made it to old age, so those who did were
    respected
  • In the days before Social Security provided for
    retirement, the elderly worked and were seen as
    wise and knowledgeable about work skills

33
The Symbolic Interactionist Perspective
  • Industrialization eroded traditional bases of
    respect
  • With improved sanitation and health care, living
    to an old age was no longer unique
  • The mystique that the elderly possess superior
    knowledge was stripped away by mass education
  • The aging baby boom generation, because of their
    numbers and their better financial standing, will
    very likely contribute to more positive symbols
    of aging

34
The Functionalist Perspective
  • Functionalists examine age from the standpoint of
    how those persons who are retiring and those who
    will replace them in the work force make mutual
    adjustments
  • Elaine Cumming and William Henry developed
    disengagement theory to explain how society
    prevents disruption to that society when the
    elderly retire
  • The elderly are rewarded (pensions) for giving up
    positions rather than waiting until they become
    incompetent or die
  • This allows for a smooth transition of positions
  • This is criticized because it assumes that the
    elderly disengage and then sink into oblivion

35
The Functionalist Perspective
  • Activity theory
  • Examines peoples reactions to this exchange of
    one set of roles for another
  • Older people who maintain a high level of
    activity tend to be more satisfied with life than
    those who do not
  • Level of activity is connected to key factors
    such as social class, health, and individual
    orientation

36
The Conflict Perspective
  • Conflict theorists examine social life as a
    struggle between groups for scarce resources
  • Social Security legislation is an example of that
    struggle
  • In the 1920s30s, two-thirds of all citizens in
    the United States over 65 had no savings and
    could not support themselves
  • Francis Townsend enrolled one-third of all
    Americans over 65 in clubs that sought a national
    sales tax to finance a monthly pension for all
    Americans over age 65
  • To avoid the plan without appearing to be opposed
    to old-age pensions, an alternative, Social
    Security, was enacted by Congress

37
The Conflict Perspective
  • Conflict theorists state that Social Security was
    not a result of generosity, but rather of
    competition among interest groups
  • Since equilibrium is only a temporary balancing
    of social forces, some form of continuing
    conflict between the young and the old appears
    inevitable
  • The huge costs of Social Security have become a
    national concern
  • One out of every four tax dollars goes to support
    the Social Security and Medicare programs

38
The Conflict Perspective
  • Some argue that the needs of the elderly and of
    children are on a collision course
  • Data indicate that as the number of elderly poor
    decreases, the number of children in poverty
    increases
  • It has been argued that the comparison is
    misleading because the money that went to the
    elderly did not come from money intended for the
    children
  • Framing the issue in this way is an attempt to
    divide the working class, and to force a choice
    between the needs of children and those of the
    elderly

39
  • The Greying of America
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