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what are the relationships between gender and other inequalities?

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Title: what are the relationships between gender and other inequalities?


1
what are the relationships between gender and
other inequalities?
  • lecture 6

2
Other inequalities and gender
  • 1. theorizing representing the Other
  • 2. feminist critique of class analysis
  • (e.g. Acker 19981973 Delphy 1984)
  • 3. rethinking class qualitative analysis (e.g.
    Reay 1998)
  • 4. inequalities between men?
  • all men are not created equal
  • (e.g. Espiritu in Kimmel Messner 2001)

3
Other inequalities and gender
  • 5. Black feminists and women of colour critique
    of mainstream feminism?
  • 6. stereotyped sexual representations of Black
    masculinity and femininity
  • 7. Orientalism and exoticisation
  • (e.g. Said 1978)
  • 8. summary

4
theorizing representing the othersee Kitzinger
Wilkinson in Wilkinson Kitzinger 1996
  • 1. issue of Othering
  • 2. woman as Other (de Beauvoir 1949)
  • 3. do women have a monopoly on Otherness?
  • 4. Othering of non-western women?

5
debates within feminism
  • 1. primacy of gender over class?
  • 2. patriarchy (radical feminists) or capitalism
    (marxist/socialist feminists)
  • 3. patriarchy and capitalsim (dual-systems)
  • 4. feminist critique of malestream sociological
    research on class

6
feminist critique of class analysis (1)Acker
1998 1973 in Myers et al Abbott et al 2005
  • poor at understanding womens class positions
  • assumes
  • - the family is the unit of analysis in
    stratification
  • - the womans status is equal to male head of
    family (based on the mans occupation)
  • - are households are always headed by males?
  • - independent women determine their own class
    status?
  • - these assumptions are often invalid ignores
    the significance of gender inequalities in
    stratification systems

7
feminist critique of class analysis (2)Delphy
1984 Bryson 1999
  • 1. marriage (not occupation) the main class
    criteria for women
  • 2. women as a class
  • 3. discrimination in labour market forces women
    to marry

8
rethinking class qualitative analysis e.g. Reay
1998
  • 1. class is not just about an objective economic
    position
  • 2. need to move beyond labour market
    (structuralist) focus
  • 3. discourses are important
  • 4. discourse of classlessness blames working
    class for not succeeding
  • 5. class and class inequalities are lived in
    gendered ways
  • e.g. the way mothers relate to education is
    shaped by class

9
inequalities between men?e.g. Espiritu in Kimmel
Messner 2001
  • All men are not created equal Asian men in U.S.
    history
  • - the material lives of Asian American men do not
    fit white middle class patterns of masculinity
  • - pre-second world war forced into feminised
    occupations laundry
  • - internment in war robbed Japanese American men
    of breadwinner role
  • - currently some Asian men poorly educated and
    unskilled unlike stereotype
  • - changes in gender power balance if women
    working

10
Aint I A Woman?
Sojourner Truth
11
Black feminists critical of feminism?e.g.
hooks 1992 Mills/Kanneh in Jackson Jones 1998
Mohanty 1997
  • 1. history of slavery/colonisation important in
    understanding women of colour
  • 2. how to be feminine and black
  • - images of proper femininity have been mostly
    on white, middle class western women
  • - experiences of black women also invisible in
    ways of thinking about what is black based on
    black men
  • 3. black women/women of colour are not a
    homogenous group

12
appreciating differencehooks 1992
  • 1. feminism originally based largely around white
    middle class women race and class ignored
  • 2. decolonisation needed
  • - a process of re-presenting colonised
    identities and interests as independent
  • - involves both colonised and coloniser
  • - need to recognise diversity of and within
    colonised groups
  • 3. recognising difference makes generalisations
    about women difficult?

13
third world womenMohanty cited in Kemp
Squires 1997
  • 1. relation between Woman and women
  • 2. assumes that there is a group called women who
    are all oppressed
  • 3. based on seeing Western womens experiences as
    the norm and universal.
  • 4. this makes third world womens specific
    oppression invisible or represents it as
    homogenous.

14
representations of black masculinity e.g. Hall
1997 Staples in Kimmel Messner 2001 hooks 2004
  • sexualisation
  • - super masculine
  • e.g. Linford Christies lunchbox

15
representations of black femininity e.g. Hall 1997
  • sexualisation
  • e.g. Hottentot Venus
  • primitivism?
  • blackness reduced to a natural essence?

16
Orientalism Said 1978 Baldwin et al 1999
  • 1. discourse of Orientalism -construction of
    Occident (West best) and Orient (East mysterious)
  • 2. dichotomises
  • 3. essentialises generalisations
  • 4. hierarchical knowledge and power
  • 5. East is the Wests Other

17
e.g. of characteristics - Orientalism
  • WEST
  • Sensible
  • Unexotic
  • Light
  • Strong
  • Rational
  • Fair treatment
  • Virtuous
  • (Occident - masculine?)
  • EAST
  • Mystical
  • Exotic
  • Dark
  • Weak
  • Irrational
  • Cruelty
  • Depraved
  • (Orient - feminine?)

18
e.g. exoticismMills in Jackson Jones 1998
  • Orient sexually coded
  • sexual fantasy harems
  • dominated the representation of the East

19
summary
  • 1. structuralist accounts of the intersection of
    inequalities focus more on inequality in
    distribution of material resources
  • 2. hooks, Hall et al have focused on importance
    of discourses, ideas
  • - confronting hegemonic systems of thought
  • 3. need to challenge both symbolic and material
    inequalities?
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