Title: Chapter 9: Constructing Gender and Sexuality
1- Chapter 9 Constructing Gender and Sexuality
2What is Sex? What is Gender?
- Although the terms sex and gender are often
used interchangeably, sociologists differentiate
between the two.
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3What is Sex? What is Gender? (contd)
- Sex refers to an individuals membership in one
of two biologically distinct categoriesmale or
female.
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5What is Sex? What is Gender? (contd)
- Gender refers to the physical, behavioral, and
personality traits that a group considers normal
for its male and female members.
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6Essentialist Approach to Gender Identity
- Essentialists see gender as biological and
permanentit is a simple, two-category system.
Your chromosomes, hormones, and genitalia
determine your identity.
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7Constructionist Approach to Gender Identity
- Most sociologists use a constructionist approach
and see gender as a social construction and
acknowledge the possibility that the malefemale
categories are not the only way of classifying
individuals.
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8Gender Inequality
- Gender inequality can be found in all past and
present societies. - There are several sociological theories that
attempt to explain why this inequality has
persisted in contemporary societies.
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9Theories on Gender Inequality
- Functionalists
- Believe that there are social roles better suited
to one gender than the other, and that societies
are more stable when certain tasks are fulfilled
by the appropriate sex.
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10Theories on Gender Inequality (contd)
- According to Talcott Parsons
- Men were more suited for an instrumental role
(the person who provides the familys material
support and is often an authority figure). - Women were more suited for an expressive role
(the person who provides the familys emotional
support and nurturing).
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11Theories on Gender Inequality (contd)
- Conflict theorists
- Believe men have historically had access to most
of societys material resources and privileges.
Therefore, it is in their interest to try to
maintain their dominant position.
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12Theories on Gender Inequality (contd)
- Interactionists emphasize how the concept of
gender is socially constructed, maintained, and
reproduced in our everyday lives.
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14Gender Role Socialization
- Gender role socialization is the lifelong process
of learning to be masculine or feminine,
primarily through four main agents of
socialization families, schools, peers, and the
media.
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15Gender Role Socialization (contd)
- Families are usually the primary source of
socialization and greatly impact gender role
socialization. - Social learning theory suggests that babies and
children learn behaviors and meanings through
social interaction and internalize the
expectations of those around them.
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16Gender Role Socialization (contd)
- Schools also socialize children into their gender
roles. For instance, research shows that
teachers treat boys and girls differently. This
may teach children that there are different
expectations of them, based on their sex.
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17Gender Role Socialization (contd)
- In Western societies, peer groups are an
important agent of socialization. - Teens are rewarded by peers when they conform to
gender norms and stigmatized when they do not.
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18Gender Role Socialization (contd)
- Finally, there is no question that sex-role
behavior is portrayed in a highly stereotypical
manner in all forms of the media television,
movies, magazines, books, video games, and so on.
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19Sex, Gender, and Life Chances
- Sex and gender affect almost every significant
aspect of our lives. Even lifespan is different
based on sex!
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20Sex, Gender, and Life Chances
- Women are disadvantaged in institutional settings
in our society. Women tend to - Do a disproportionate amount of housework
- Earn less on average than their male peers at
work - Remain more likely to live in poverty
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22Sex, Gender, and Life Chances (contd)
- This has led to a situation called the
feminization of poverty, which is the economic
trend showing that women are more likely than men
to live in poverty, due in part to the gendered
gap in wages, the higher proportion of single
mothers compared to single fathers, and the
increasing cost of child care.
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23Female-to-Male Earning Ratio
24Sex, Gender, and Life Chances (contd)
- Second Shift is a term that describes the unpaid
housework and child care often expected of a
woman, even after she completes a day of paid
labor outside of the home.
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25Sex, Gender, and Life Chances (contd)
- Even our language and vocabulary tend to reflect
a hierarchal system of gender inequality.
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26The Womens Movement
- Feminism is the belief in the social, political,
and economic equality of the sexes and the social
movements organized around that belief.
- In the United States, the history of the Womens
Movement can be divided into three historical
waves.
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27The Womens Movement (contd)
- The first wave was the earliest period of
feminist activism and included the period from
the mid-nineteenth century until American women
won the right to vote in 1920. The campaign
organized around gaining voting rights for women
was called the suffrage movement.
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28The Womens Movement (contd)
- The second wave was the period of feminist
activity during the 1960s and 1970s, often
associated with the issues of womens equal
access to employment and education.
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29The Womens Movement (contd)
- The third wave is the most recent period of
feminist activity and focuses on issues of
diversity and the variety of identities that
women can possess.
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30The Mens Movement
- The Mens Movement, called male liberationism,
was a movement that originated in the 1970s to
discuss the challenges of masculinity.
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31The Mens Movement (contd)
- Although originally broadly sympathetic with
feminism, the mens movement has now split into
the mens rights movement (a group that feels
that feminism creates disadvantages for men) and
the pro-feminist mens movement (a group that
feels that sexism harms both men and women and
wants to fundamentally change societys ideas
about gender).
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32Sexual Orientation
- Sexual orientation is the inclination to be
heterosexual (attracted to the opposite sex),
homosexual (attracted to the same sex), or
bisexual (attracted to either sex).
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33Sexual Orientation (contd)
- Is sexual orientation a continuum rather than a
few simple categories? - Those who are asexual may simply reject any
sexual identity at all.
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34Homophobia
- Homophobia is a fear of or discrimination toward
homosexuals or toward individuals who display
purportedly gender-inappropriate behavior.
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35Kinseys 7-point continuum
- Scale based on both feelings of attraction
sexual behavior - Distinctions between gay and straight are not as
clear cut as many believe them to
becontradicting common sense notions of fixed
orientation
Fig. 9.2 Kinseys continuum of sexual orientation
(adapted from Kinsey et al., 1948, p. 638).
36Vocabulary-
- Heterosexism Attitudes and practices that
value heterosexual people or relationships over
non-heterosexual ones - Heteronormativity - Cultural processes that
construct heterosexuality as natural and normal
while homosexuality is constructed as deviant - Homophobia - Hatred or fear of homosexuality or
of individuals who identify as LGBTQ
37Discussion
- What stereotypes of lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgendered individuals have you gotten from
the media? How do you think this impacts your
own levels of hetersexism or homophobia? - Do you think that societal changes are necessary
before we see changes in the portrayals of LGBT
individuals in the media? Or do you think that
more accurate portrayals will bring about change
in social attitudes?
38Structures Disadvantaging LGBTQ Citizens
- Marriage
- Housing Discrimination
- Hospital Visitation
- Adoption
- Employment Hiring/Firing
- Legal Protections/Hate Crimes
- Economic Benefits taxes, property transfer, etc.
39Homosexuality Legal Homosexuality Illegal Dark
Blue Marriage Orange Heavy PenaltyLight
Blue Other Legal Partnership Red Up to life
in PrisonAqua Foreign marriages
recognized Maroon Up to deathGray No
recognition
40DiscussionHeterosexual Questionnaire
- Did you find the questions hard to answer? Were
some harder than others? Which? Why? - How did the questions make you feel?
- What does it say about our society that LGB
people are frequently asked similar questions? - Heterosexual Privilege
- Privilege an advantage, right or immunity
attached to a particular social position