similarities and differences between males and females? ... gender trouble' attempts to reveal or upset the fictional fixity of gender e.g. Drag ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation
similarities and differences between males and females?
historical critique of natural status of sex and two-sex model
five sexes and intersexuality?
e.g. Agnes (Garfinkel)
is gender something we do?
3 gender
1970s - sex/gender distinction social construction of gender (Oakley)
constructing masculinities (Connell)
gender display (Goffman)
doing gender (West Zimmerman)
distinguish between sex, sex category and gender
natural attitude and gender attribution
(Kessler McKenna)
gender as performative (Butler)
4 gendered bodies?
somatophobia and Cartesian dualism
is there a natural body?
(essentialism/social constructionism)
mens bodies
woman as body?
Butler some bodies matter others dont lived body?
doing and disciplining bodies?
resist e.g. female body building?
how are bodies socially constructed materially (e.g. social institutions social practices) and symbolically (representation discourses)?
5 some problems with the sex-gender distinction?
assume sex is biological and ahistorical?
gender mapped onto natural and neutral bodies?
does female feminine/male masculine?
role of the body in the social construction of gender disrupt and /or maintain boundaries between femininity and masculinity?
is there a distinction between sex and gender? (Butler)
6 feminist theories/perspectives(e.g. Tong Jackson Evans)
different feminist perspectives liberal, Marxist/socialist, radical and dual systems
1970s social science perspectives dominated feminist theory materialist emphasis e.g. inequalities in power, wealth, education and work (paid and unpaid)
major concern how to explain womens subordination
7 shift from things to words(e.g. Barrett Weedon Zalewski)
early 1980s cultural/linguistic turn
greater influence from literary and cultural theories and less social science
material gt symbolic (or cultural)
explore the importance of language, discourse and representation
8 mapping gender theories
Material cultural turn Symbolic
MODERNSIM ? POSTMODERNISM
STRUCTURALISM ? POSTSTRUCTURALISM
CRITICAL THEORY ? DECONSTRUCTION
EQUALITY ? DIFFERENCE
9 how equal are women and men now?
you gathered evidence see web - information
considered Walbys work
six structures of patriarchy
shift from private to public patriarchy
polarisation and convergence
exclusion to segregation
improved by womens political participation
patriarchy affects women differently?
feminist degendering movement (Lorber) question gender divisions?
- long term process
- applied globally?
10 gendered interests and politics
redefined what is political personal?
identity politics feminist standpoint
problems identity politics?
categories exclude
authenticity and hierarchy of oppression?
build coalitions?
masculinity politics therapeutic defend hegemonic masculinity gay refusing to be a man? (Connell Messner hooks Seidler)
when is the personal political?
11 gender and other inequalities (1)
woman as other monopoly on otherness?
othering of non-western women?
debates within feminism primacy of gender over class?
critique class analysis (Acker)
e.g. marriage not job women as a class (Delphy)?
not just about labour market are discourses important too? (Reay)
inequalities between men too?
12 gender and other inequalities (2)
Black feminists critical of feminism aint I a woman? (Truth)
slavery/colonisation
proper femininity white middle class ?
not a homogenous group third world women (Mohanty)
appreciating difference decolonisation (hooks)
representations of black masculinity - Linford Christie and femininity - Hottentot Venus
(Hall)
Orientalism (Said)
exotic and primitive?
challenge both material and symbolic inequalities?
13 such a thing as a woman or a man?
gender and the linguistic turn
feminists influenced by postuctructuralism/postmod ernism
language does not simply reflect but actively constructs reality
claim language constructs what it means to be a man or a woman
misrecognise - take as natural what is linguistically constructed?
14 signified
idea of woman
no such thing as woman
purely linguistic construct
varies between languages
woman signifier THE SIGN 15 such a thing as a woman or a man?
semiotics (Saussure)
arbitrary nature of the sign
no fixed meaning relational
postructuralists and meaning (Derrida)
meaning is never fixed but in flux
how become fixed power?
deconstruction meanings constantly moving
e.g. category of woman
discourse (Foucault) professional groups truth claims categorise people panoptic effect produce the subject
16 gender as performative (Butler)
representation
woman not biological category
sex- linguistic category
sexuality cultural resource resist?
doing words
speech act theory (Austin)
e.g. Its a girl
everyday performances
labelled man/woman perform according to norms (heterosexual matrix)
17 gender as performative
gender is an act that brings into being what it names a masculine man or feminine woman (Salih, 200264)
language constitutes gendered identities
no doer or I outside language gendered subjects are the effects of language
gender trouble attempts to reveal or upset the fictional fixity of gender e.g. Drag
18 media shape our ideas about gender?
critically considered the notion of a male gaze (Mulvey) and female gaze (Gamman Marshment)
is normality reinforced by representations of feminine and masculine bodies?
if so, how?
illusion of individual choice (Bordo)?
discipline self/body according to the norms of appearance portrayed for success?
e.g. woman passive, man active?
19 media shape our ideas about gender?
is resistance possible? e.g. techniques of the self (Foucault)
can women be represented as active and men as passive?
can this binary be avoided?
does the media present one (hegemonic) norm to follow?
are people slaves to what the media represents?
20 the future of gender (and bodies)?
feminism(s) and technology ambivalent relationship
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