Slides Week 8 Flashcards

1
Q

Gender and Sexuality

A
  • Gender:
    • Terminology; Flexibility; Typing; Consolidation; Gender and Ageing.
  • Sexuality:
    • Sexual orientation, Sexual behaviour.
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2
Q

Identity Domains -

A
  • Erikson (1968):
  • The identity crisis associated with the stage of adolescence in resolved in THREE domains:
    • Vocation (Occupation).
    • Ideology (Religion/Morality/Politics).
  • Resolution of the crisis in the domain of interpersonal relationships involves:
    • The consolidation of a gender role.
    • A decision about sexual orientation
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3
Q

Erikson Stages of Development - Gender & Sexuality

A
  • Intimacy v. Isolation.
  • Generativity v. Stagnation.
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4
Q

Gender Definition

A
  • The cultural way of performing biological sex
  • Traditionally considered Male/Female Binary
  • Integral part of everyday life routines
  • Construction of ‘gender’ begins at birth and is continually shaped throughout lifespan.
  • Can be regarded in most cultures as a main status indicator
  • Argued that gender is a fundamental component of the “structure of domination and subordination and division of labour in the family and economy” (Lorber & Farrell, 1991, pp. 1-2) ​
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5
Q

Doing Gender

A
  • Competence of men and women as gendered beings is often determined on the basis of how well they demonstrate the qualities/characteristics associated with maleness and femaleness.
  • Taught/learned at a very young age of what girls versus boys should do.
  • Institutions (e.g., school, family, religious organisations) have a great level of influence on shaping expectations around gender.
  • It can be argued that institutions promote these expectations to maintain modes of operations and values in society.
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6
Q

Gender

A
  • Many individuals use the term gender synonymously with sex
  • Gender is a social construct based on biological features pertaining to genitalia.
  • Constantly modified through human interactions in a myriad of social contexts
  • In most cultures/societies an individual’s gender is considered binary oppositions:
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7
Q

Binary Oppositions

A
  • Traditional conceptions of genders:
  • Masculine: Assertive, independent, aggressive, leadership, protective.
  • Feminine: Nurturing, warm, passive, dependent.
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8
Q

Gender Stereotype

A
  • Fixed, oversimplified and distorted ideas about women and men based upon their presumed biological sex.
  • Assumption is that gender must be consistent with biological sex.
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9
Q

Gender Flexibility

A
  • Greater flexibility in behaviours that are permissible among males and especially females in contemporary society compared with fifty years ago, gender stereotypes continue to be widespread across Western countries.
  • However, there is less consistency in what constitutes appropriately gendered behaviour for men and women when research based upon non-Western cultures is considered.
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10
Q

Mead 1935 - Gender Flexibility

A

Mead (1935): Lived and worked in three tribal societies in Papua New Guinea.

  • Mundugmor (head hunters).
    • Men and women both aggressive.
    • Women disdained child rearing and child bearing because it interrupted participation in warring parties against neighbouring villages.
  • Arapesh.
    • Men and women both gentle and peaceful.
    • Both men and women nurtured children.
  • Tchambuli/Chambri
    • Men were engaged in rearing of children, gossiping, beautification rituals, and bickering.
    • Women were responsible for providing food for the family (fish), kept heads shaven, disdained ornaments, and were more highly sexed and aggressive than the men.
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11
Q

International Gender Flexibility

A

Cultures with more than two genders

  • Maori culture. Wakawahine: men who engage in traditionally feminine occupations. Wakatane: females who pursue traditionally male roles.
  • Filipino culture. Bakla: biological males who adopts the dress, mannerisms and social roles of females.
  • Samoan culture. Fa’afafine: biological males with strong feminine gender orientation.
  • Gender roles understood differently than in West.
  • Therefore, gender is not fixed according to biology, but flexible.
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12
Q
A
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13
Q

Gender Typing

A
  • Individuals develop a gender identity that is consistent with his/her biological sex
  • The process by which females become feminine, and by which males become masculine.
  • ‘Getting their gender right’ = being normal
    • Those who adopt identities outside the dominant versions of gender
    • Those who do not perform within socially accepted boundaries of masculinity and femininity risk marginalisation
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14
Q

Gender Typing

A
  • Etaugh & Rathus (1995):
  • Children acquire awareness of gender role stereotypes by the ages of 2 and a half to 3 and a half years
  • When asked to describe differences between boys and girls, boys and girls agree that:
    • Boys: Build things, play with transportation toys, enjoy helping fathers, hit other children.
    • Girls: Enjoy playing with dolls, helping their mothers cook and clean, are talkative, depend on others for help, are nonviolent. ​
      *
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