Gender and Society (1) Flashcards

1
Q

What are some reasons for the change of family landscape in Britain?

A
  • Ease of Divorce
  • Single Parents
  • Homosexual relationships
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2
Q

What is Feminism?

A
  • Name given to a wide range of movements that sought equality, freedom and dignity for women
  • Has gone through ‘waves’ which shifts and developments in views
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3
Q

Outline Harriet Taylors ‘first wave’ of feminism and the view she posited?

A
  • In her ‘Enfranchisement of Women’ for the right to vote
  • ‘equality in all rights, political, civil and social with all male citizens’
  • True partnership of male and female is equal pay and financial independence
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4
Q

What social reforms were made as a result of the ‘first wave’ of feminism?

A
  • State-funded child care
  • More flexible working hours
  • Maternity leave for women
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5
Q

What was the ‘second wave’ of feminism and who was the advocate of this?

A
  • True equality could only be achieved when both men and women mindset changed
  • No change of attitudes would result in a male-dominated patriarchal society
  • Betty Friedan
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6
Q

What point did Betty Friedan make in her ‘The feminine mystique’?

A
  • Research showed that those women who played the role of the homemaker in the 50’s was leaving them unfulfilled, bored and frustrated
  • Knowing other women felt like this gave them the courage to break away from traditional roles, and not play into the ‘feminine mystique’
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7
Q

What was Simone De Beauvoir’s aims?

A
  • She wanted to challenge the deep seated prejudices that make women seem inferior to men
  • Asserted the idea that women need to change their mindsets along with men
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8
Q

What is De Beauvoir’s false-consciousness?

A
  • Women who have an objectively false view of themselves in line with societally created gender roles
  • This leads women to lack freedom and self-worth, they need to break away from this false-consciousness for true freedom
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9
Q

Quote De Beauvoir in the ‘Second Sex’?

A

“not born, but rather becomes a woman”
- You are not born with gender roles, society traps you and defines you by these
- Women are encouraged to believe in the ‘Eternal Feminine’, this does not exist and women should choose what they want to do

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10
Q

What is the ‘glass ceiling’ women still face today?

A
  • Despite being able to get male roles (Jobs etc), there still does seem to be a ‘glass ceiling’ of what they can achieve
  • They are limited to access the highest roles, in political, science and legal professions
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11
Q

What is the issue of sex and gender roles?

A
  • Argued that gender is more complex than sex, it refers to ones masculine/feminine traits
  • Can be said gender roles change over time, e.g women
  • Argument about whether gender is related to biological sex or a social construct as a whole
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12
Q

What is the Essentialist view on sex and gender?

A
  • There are feminine and masculine characteristics that are a product of biology and nature
  • Womens bodies are designed for child birth and nurturing whereas men are more muscular to show dominance in the work place
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13
Q

What is the Existentialist view on sex and gender?

A
  • Gender are a product of nurture through culture and upbringing
  • E.g the sexualisation/objectification of women was a social construct created by men
  • E.g in some cultures curvy bodies are desirable whereas in some its facial factors
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14
Q

What is Marx’s notion of human interaction and how is this linked to gender?

A
  • Marx believed that human interaction is about power and which group dominates another
  • Secular approach asserts that sexuality is not essentialist/existentialist but rather about power
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15
Q

What is the purpose of sexuality for Michel Foucault?

A
  • Sexual history shows that sexuality cannot be defined in binary terms of male and female
  • ars erotica; believes the purpose of sex is for companionship, pleasure and education
  • Sexuality covers all practices, heterosexual, homosexual and transgender
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16
Q

How does sexuality maintain power for Michel Foucault?

A
  • Scientia Sexualis: Controlling sexual practices as a means of maintaining power
  • e.g The way the Church regulated men and women sexual practices and gender roles
  • The Church’s role has been weakened and the role of identifying ‘correct sexual behaviour has been transferred
17
Q

What was the Order of Nature displayed in Genesis 1?

A
  • Man and woman are both created in the image of God with their primary role to reproduce and maintain natural order of the world
18
Q

How do gender differences become exaggerated after The Fall in Genesis 3?

A
  • Genesis 3:16, women will be mothers ruled over by their husbands
  • Genesis 3:17-19 Men will work and provide for the family
  • There is a natural order, women work at home with domestic duties and man works outside as a provider
19
Q

What is Gods Covenant Ideal?

A
  • Aftermath of the Fall is that human nature is distorted to the point where men and women cannot live due to natural order
  • God therefore establishes a covenant ideal through biblical commands
20
Q

What is the Story of Mary and Martha? (Luke 10)

A
  • Mary is allowed to listen and learn from Jesus’ teachings to prepare for a public role, e.g disciple, teacher which is usually a male role
  • Martha is criticised as she can only think about her domestic duties
  • Mary represents the newly liberated female gender role whereas Martha represents the traditional
21
Q

What is the Letter to Ephesians?

A

A letter that covers a wide range of issues, e.g speaking truthfully, sexual purity, honesty and care for the poor

22
Q

What does the Letter to the Ephesians say about women?

A
  • “Wives be subject to your husbands as you are to the lord”
  • The husband as “the head to the wife”
23
Q

What are the 3 interpretations of the Letter to the Ephesians when it comes to women?

A

1) Can be interpreted as a means of oppressing women, treating them as beneath and subservient to their husbands
2) ‘Head’ can also mean the ‘source of life’ and refer back to Genesis 2:21-23, emphasising relationship and not authority
3) Ephesians 5:21, ‘obedience’ is mutual ‘to one another’, showing the nature of obedience is beyond gender roles

24
Q

What does the Letter to the Ephesians say about men?

A
  • “Husbands love your wives just as Christ loved the church”
  • Husbands should care and nourish his wife as he does his own body, ‘body’ being the relationship
25
Q

What does Paul say in 1 Corinthians?

A
  • Paul forbids women to speak in Church and should seek to be educated by their husband at home
26
Q

How does St Paul reiterate his message in 1 Corinthians in his letter to Timothy? (Quote)

A

“I permit no woman to teach or to have authority over a man” - 1 Timothy 2:11-14