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Gender Construction Theory

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Sex. Performance. 5-minute writing. List 10 gendered binaries. Turn to ... Sex (male, female) is seen to cause gender (masculine, feminine) which is seen ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Gender Construction Theory


1
Gender Construction Theory
  • Lecture 3
  • Beyond the Binaries
  • COM 490
  • Professor Ralina Joseph

2
Terms for the day
  • Gender
  • Sex
  • Performance

3
5-minute writing
  • List 10 gendered binaries

4
Turn to opening anecdote
  • How do we end up as gendered human beings?
  • Why are people divided into the binary of men and
    women?
  • How are bodies important in constructing the
    gendered binary?

5
Heads Together
  • For your assigned section
  • How is gender understood and explained?
  • What binaries can you identify, if any?
  • Any parts that go beyond the binaries?
  • Links from your section to racial
    formation/racial construction?

6
Nature John Locke
  • 1. world divided into natural, essential kinds
  • 2. world divided into what people construct as
    like and unlike

7
Sex vs Gender
  • Sex differences seen as biological
  • Gender differences seen as socially constructed

8
MTV Clips
  • How is masculinity constructed?
  • How is femininity constructed?

9
Judith Butlers Theories of Gender
Constructedness (starts w/ critique of 2nd wave
feminism)
  • Feminism made a mistake by trying to assert that
    'women' were a group with common characteristics
    and interests
  • Feminism reinforced a binary view of gender
    relations humans divided into women and men.
  • Rather than opening up possibilities for a person
    to form and choose their own individual identity,
    feminism closed options down.
  • Feminists rejected idea that biology is destiny
    (like Graves on race being destiny), but
    developed account of patriarchal culture which
    assumed that masculine and feminine genders would
    inevitably be built, by culture, upon 'male' and
    'female' bodies (still destiny). No room for
    choice, difference or resistance.

10
Instead
  • Rather than a fixed attribute, gender is a fluid
    variable which shifts and changes in different
    contexts and at different times (like racial
    formation theory)
  • Sex (male, female) is seen to cause gender
    (masculine, feminine) which is seen to cause
    desire (towards the other gender). Butler's says
    NO gender and desire flexible, free-floating and
    not 'caused' by other stable factors.
  • There is no gender identity behind the
    expressions of gender ... identity is
    performatively constituted by the very
    expressions that are said to be its results.
    (Gender Trouble, p. 25). In other words, gender
    is a performance it's what you do at particular
    times, rather than a universal who you are.

11
More Butler on Gender
  • Certain cultural configurations of gender have a
    hegemonic hold (i.e. have come to seem natural)
    -- but, it doesn't have to be that way.
  • Butler calls for gender trouble --
    mobilization, subversive confusion, and
    proliferation of genders -- and therefore
    identity.
  • We all put on gender performance, whether
    traditional or not, anyway, and so it is not a
    question of whether to do a gender performance,
    but what form that performance will take. By
    choosing to trouble gender, we might work to
    change gender norms and the binary understanding
    of masculinity and femininity.

12
Links to Queer Theory
  • Idea of identity as free-floating, not connected
    to an 'essence', but instead a performance. Our
    identities do not express some authentic inner
    "core" self but are the dramatic effect (rather
    than the cause) of our performances.
  • Not just relevant re sexuality, or gender. It
    also suggests that any identity can potentially
    be reinvented by its owner...
  • And finally -- what has this got to do with media
    and communication studies? Well, the call for
    gender trouble has obvious media implications,
    since the mass media is the primary means for
    alternative and traditional images to be
    disseminated.
  • The media is therefore the site upon which this
    'semiotic war' (a war of symbols, of how things
    are represented) would take place.
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