Lecture 14: Gender Flashcards

1
Q

gender norms

A

differ radically in time and space

physical characteristics that define a person as male/female

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2
Q

gender roles

A

how boys and girls learn to express their masculinity or femininity varies across and within cultures

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3
Q

sex

A

biological distinctions b/w m/f

male/female

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4
Q

gender

A

cultural constructions of male and female characteristics

man/woman

-costume we all must wear
-set of roles, assumptions, practices, and stereotypes we use to give shape to m&f characteristics, both social and biological
WHY can someone guess gender identity? gendered clothing, bodies, and hairstyles vary predictably and consistently

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5
Q

gender stereotypes

A

inform our expectations of (normal) appropriate behavior, dress, and temperament for US men and women

toys growing up: barbie/hot wheels

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6
Q

Women in the Mine

A

Jessica Rolston
women working in mines in Wyoming take on different identities to succeed
3 gendered identities: tomboys, ladies, bitches(overly masculine)
some of these had more long term value(tomboys)

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7
Q

Margaret Mead

A

“Sex and Temperament”
showed how masculinity and femininity varied across cultures
1) Arapesh: men and women behaved as Americans expect women to act– mild, nurturing
2) Mundugumor: men and women both act as Americans expect men to act–fierce, aggressive
3) Tchambuli: men act as we stereotype women as acting–“catty”, overly concerned with appearance,
women act as we stereotype men to act

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8
Q

Rosie the Riveter

A

WW2
demonstrated that women can do traditionally men’s work
gender roles/norms can change according to societal needs

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9
Q

Third Sexes/Genders

A

two-sex/gender system may be the norm, it is neither a cultural nor biological…

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10
Q

Intersex

A

Klinefelter Syndrome, Triple X Syndrome, Turner Syndrome(one X/Y instead of 2)

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11
Q

Transgender

A

person’s identity differs with what they were assigned at birth
does not have its roots in biology

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12
Q

cultural exceptions to the 2 gender system

A

people wear gendered wardrobes that run counter to their anatomical sex
Two-Spirit: common among great plains American groups; believed to have the spirit of a female
Hijras: Indian males who become neither m/f through castration/right of passage

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13
Q

gender equality

A
  • public domestic dichotomy
  • -when domestic and public spheres are clearly separated, public activities tend to have greater prestige compared to domestic ones
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14
Q

gender stratification

A

unequal distribution of rewards b/w women and men

  • among the !Kung: little distinction b/w public and domestic figures
  • among Auburnites: clear distinction, constantly becoming more fluid
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15
Q

patriarchy

A

male dominance and greater male prestige are associated with the masculinization of the public sphere and fem

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16
Q

foragers

A

-little gender stratification
simple division of labor(hunt/gather)
less of a public-domestic dichotomy

17
Q

horticulturalists

A

more complex division of labor and more gender distinction

status of men is higher when women contribute

18
Q

agriculturalists

A

-more gender stratification
-more complex division of labor and political control
women are considered an economic drain/risk, hence -they are controlled and access to resources is limited

19
Q

industrialists

A
  • gender stratification persists
  • division of labor is complex but not inherently dependent on gender differences–flexible
  • status of men/women is higher when they contribute more to the household and general economies
20
Q

kinks/consequences of the model

A
  • If a person is to succeed in the public sphere, today, must he/she be more like a “man,” or must men be less like “traditional” men in engaging with women who enter the public sphere?
  • And what about the domestic sphere?
  • How is it affected by the changes in the public sphere?
  • Who performs the roles once associated with males and females in this sphere?
  • Is the feminization of poverty (the increasing representation of women and their children among America’s poorest people) related to the “collapse” of the domestic sphere?
  • How do wealthy, successful, publicly-engaged people (male and female) handle domestic life and its demands?
21
Q

recent shifts in gender norms/roles

A
  1. Changing attitudes toward homosexuality and “gender transgression”
  2. Changing attitudes toward male sexuality/violence
  3. Changing attitudes toward female sexuality/ passivity
  4. Use of new gender models as forms of postcolonial social control and ethnocentric cultural critique of non-Western populations