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Chapter 4 Gender Inequality

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Title: Chapter 4 Gender Inequality


1
Chapter 4Gender Inequality
2
What is Gender?
  • Gender the meaning a society attaches to being
    male or female
  • Sex the biological distinction between females
    and males

3
Gender Stratification and Patriarchy
  • Gender is an important dimension of social
    inequality.
  • Gender stratification frequently takes the form
    of patriarchy (social patterns by which males
    dominate females)
  • Patriarchy is widely evident in the U.S. and
    around the world
  • Sociologists see patriarchy - and the entire
    range of gender - as the creation of society
    itself

4
Gender Stratification and Patriarchy
  • Gender stereotypes rigidly divide humanity by
    constructing femininity and masculinity in
    opposing terms.
  • Critics conclude that gender stereotypes overlook
    the fact that people are much more complex than
    stereotypes allow for.

5
The Problem of Sexism
  • Sexism is the assertion that one sex is innately
    superior or inferior to the other
  • Sexism supports patriarchy by claiming that men
    are better than women and therefore should
    dominate them.

6
Gender and the Family
  • The importance of gender to family life begins
    with the fact that most expectant parents prefer
    a son to a daughter.
  • The influence continues in the childhood
    socialization process.
  • After reaching adulthood, gender makes marriage
    two distinctive relationships
  • Jesse Bernards his marriage and her marriage

7
Gender and Education
  • Even before starting school, children are exposed
    to gender bias in childrens books.
  • By 2000, 57.3 of college students were women
  • social pressures still steer women toward majors
    in English, dance, drama, or gender issues
  • men still are directed toward physics, economics,
    math, computer science, and engineering

8
Gender and Education
  • Research indicates that the social aspects of
    campus life discourages the career aspirations of
    many women
  • Despite the passage of Title IX in 1972, equality
    in athletic programs is more the exception than
    the rule

9
Gender and the Mass Media
  • By 2000, there were more than 200 million
    televisions in the United States
  • TV directs its advertising toward women but
    ignores them in TV programming
  • While gender biases in advertising is more subtle
    than in programming, its still very much in
    evidence

10
Gender and Religion
  • Religion has traditionally been patriarchal
  • In recent decades, more liberal denominations
    have moved toward greater gender equality
  • This liberal trend includes revising prayers,
    hymnals, and even the Bible to reduce sexist
    language, as well as ordaining both men and women
    as priests
  • Orthodox Judaism, Islam, and Roman Catholicism
    have retained traditional male leadership

11
Gender and Politics
  • Women have played only a marginal role in this
    nations political history
  • Thousands of women now serve at the local levels
    as mayors and council members
  • In 2001, 59 of 435 members of the House of
    Representatives and 13 of 100 Senators were women

12
Gender and Work
  • By 2000, 60 percent of the adult labor force that
    worked full-time were women
  • This increase has been due in part to a reduction
    in the time spent doing housework and the drop in
    average number of children born compared to a
    century ago

13
Gender and Work
  • Even though more women work for pay, their range
    of jobs is still limited
  • Gender discrimination was outlawed by the Federal
    Equal Pay Act of 1963 and Title VII of the Civil
    Rights Act of 1964 but even today, it continues
    to be an issue

14
Gender Stratification
  • Inequality between men and women is reflected in
    differences in income and in responsibility for
    housework, as well as in patterns of violence and
    even reproductive issues
  • Gender income inequality is the result of men
    holding different kinds of jobs, family life, and
    gender discrimination

15
Violence Against Women
  • Perhaps the most serious problem linked to
    patriarchy is mens physical violence against
    women
  • Assault, rape, and murder are common
  • Why is violence a gender issue?
  • Physical aggressiveness is a key element of the
    cultural definition of masculinity.
  • Gender violence is not so much sexual as an
    expressions of power
  • When it comes to serious violence, the most
    dangerous setting for women is the home

16
Sexual Harassment
  • Sexual Harassmentcomments, gestures, or physical
    contact of a sexual nature that are deliberate,
    repeated, and unwelcome
  • Sexual harassment that is blatant and direct is a
    violation of civil rights
  • Other forms involve more subtle behavior
  • they are still wrong if they create a hostile
    environment

17
Sexuality, Beauty and Reproduction
  • Men define women in sexual terms to gain power
    over them
  • Social norms encourage females to wear attractive
    clothes and to be attentive to men
  • Womens reproduction has been regulated
  • regulation of birth control
  • restricted access to abortion clinics

18
Women A Majority-Minority
  • Numerically, women are a slight majority of the
    U.S. population
  • Women meet the test of being both a physically
    distinctive and disadvantaged category
  • women have less income, wealth, and power than
    men

19
Minority Women
  • Minority women are doubly disadvantaged
  • They earn less than white women
  • Minority women earn less than minority men
  • In 2000, African American women earned 64 percent
    as much as white men and Hispanic women earned 51
    percent as much

20
Structural-functional analysis Gender and
Complimentarity
  • Functionalists contend that differences between
    men and women help build families and integrate
    society as a whole
  • The structural-functional analysis of gender was
    quite influential twenty-five years ago but is
    far less today

21
Structural-functional analysis Gender and
Complementarity
  • Critics contend that
  • functionalism ignores how men and women can and
    do relate to one another in a variety of ways
    that do not fit any norm
  • functionalism fails to take into account the
    personal strains and social conflicts produced by
    rigid gender patterns

22
Symbolic-Interaction Analysis Gender in Everyday
Life
  • The symbolic-interaction paradigm provides a
    micro-level analysis of gender at work in the
    everyday lives of individual people
  • Gender directly affects personal behavior, the
    use of space, and the language we use
  • Critics point out that symbolic-interaction
    overlooks the fact that gender is a basic part of
    social organization

23
Social-Conflict Analysis Gender and Inequality
  • Friedrich Engels expanded Marxs theory to
    include gender, arguing that the same process
    that allows a ruling class to dominate a worker
    places men in a dominant position over women
  • patriarchy is a system by which wealthy men
    transmit their wealth to their sons.
  • the double problem of capitalism lies in
    exploiting men in the factories and exploiting
    women in the home

24
Social-Conflict Analysis Gender and Inequality
  • Critics of this perspective point out that
    conflict theorists minimize the extent to which
    women and men live together cooperatively and in
    many cases quite happily.

25
Feminism
  • Feminism
  • the study of gender with the goal of changing
    society to make women and men equal
  • involves both theory and action

26
Feminist Foundations
  • There is no one version of feminism but almost
    all feminists agree on
  • the importance of gender
  • the importance of change
  • the importance of personal choice
  • the need to eliminate patriarchy
  • the need to eliminate violence and
  • the importance of sexual autonomy

27
Types of Feminism
  • Types of feminists
  • liberal feminists - want women and men to be
    treated as individuals but want change to occur
    within existing social institutions
  • socialist feminists -claim that a Marxist-style
    class revolution is needed to secure equality for
    all people
  • radical feminists -argue that patriarchy is built
    into the concept of gender itself and nothing
    short of erasing gender will bring about equality

28
Politics and Gender Constructing Problems and
Defining Solutions
  • Conservatives focus on the value of families
  • While most conservatives are willing to support
    women in the workplace and even in positions of
    national leadership, most also support policies
    to strengthen families

29
Politics and Gender Constructing Problems and
Defining Solutions
  • Liberals contend that patriarchy is alive and
    well in the U.S. and is a serious social problem
  • Liberals seek government support for the kinds of
    families that exist today.
  • They support affirmative action and comparable
    worth policies

30
Politics and Gender Constructing Problems and
Defining Solutions
  • Radicals argue that, at a minimum, basic change
    must come to the economic and political system
  • Some radical feminists promote the elimination of
    gender itself
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