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Definition
Who you are and what you carry with you, identity (gender is a part of you). Socialization (social agent, reinforcements), Biology (Hormones, Genes, Sex, Brain), and Evolutionary(survival of the fittest, reproduction |
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Interactionist approaches |
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Definition
- Social Situations, it’s what you do. Doing Gender (Accomplishment), Homophily (people are drawn to those whose attitudes, values, and beliefs are similar to their own). Status characteristic: gendered and ranked tasks (male/higher rank, inequality). Identification: based on the treatment we receive, we identify with the same gender. |
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Gender is Multi-leveled. Gender is a social structure in society. Most comprehensive. (organizational perspective is included within) |
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Udry 2000 (biological perspective) · Definition of gender |
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How masculine or feminine you are on a task that usually differs between the sexes. |
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Udry 2000 (biological perspective) Primary hypothesis and main findings |
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How much testosterone you are exposed to during the second trimester of pregnancy. If you are exposed to more testosterone, you can’t be socialized to be feminine. |
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Udry 2000 (biological perspective) Theoretical perspectives: |
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Definition
Biosocial (individual level of analysis) |
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Udry 2000 (biological perspective) Is change possible? Should change happen? |
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Change is only possible if women become more masculine because men are immune to feminine socialization. |
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Term
Critiques of Udry (Kennelly, Merz, and Lorber 2001; Risman 2001)[all nstitutional perspective] |
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Definition
[all nstitutional perspective] Definitions of gender: The way you act based on the position you were placed in. |
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Problems with Udry’s article: |
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Definition
value-laden/biased, didn’t cite anyone recent, doesn’t account for cultural variation, doesn’t account for similarities, places people into two distinct camps (binary) where no overlap is possible, bad questions - can’t measure femininity or masculinity |
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How to make change happen based off of what the critiques of Udry said; |
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Definition
We should make femininity something positive, not something to be immunized against |
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Howard and Hollander 2000 (socialization perspective) |
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Definition
Elements of the socialization perspective Children learn gendered behavior from their environment through a variety of processes, including imitation and modeling. Implications- Essentialism> Gender Stereotypes · Weaknesses of the socialization perspective: We can’t change gender because it is so deep seeded, doesn’t account for differences between cultures -- to the extent it is, We still have natural view of gender. |
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Thorne 1994 (examples of socialization perspective)- INDIVIDUAL LEVEL OF ANALYSIS |
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Definition
Borderwork (actions that define borders and emphasize differences; gender is most important part of that activity/thing. example: elders’ quorum and relief society) most salient feature. and neutralization (activity where gender doesn’t matter as much, a different characteristic is more important. example: kids on playground in debate with authority of recess patrol--age is defining characteristic) the children are put on the same team. Borderwork ENFORCES gender norms |
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Thorne 1994 -Issues of power |
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Definition
power issues become more salient as people get older (dont quote me on this!), power and sexuality coincide as people get older, How we hold our physical bodies show how comfortable we are in settings and shows who has power, boys have more spatial power over girls |
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West and Zimmerman 1987 (internationalism perspective – doing gender)Def of Gender |
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Definition
“emergent feature of social situations: both as an outcome of and a rationale for various social arrangments and as a means of legitimating one of the most fundamental divisions of society.” |
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West and Zimmerman 1987 - Sex (Male/Female) |
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Definition
Socially agreed upon criteria, your body), sex category (woman/man, group you are placed in, what you display.), gender (masculine/feminine, being held accountable for sex category.), and sexuality (who you kiss). They are all independent of each other. |
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Definition
doing gender is unavoidable because we are always placed in sex category |
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Lucal 1999 (interactional perspective) Definition of gender |
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Definition
-If gender is a product of interaction, and if it is produced in a particular context, then it can be changed if we change our performances. However, the effects of a performance linger, and gender ends up being institutionalized |
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“Bending” the quantifier used to determine gender are made more wide in it’s acceptance of a certain gender category. |
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Lucal 1999 What she sees as the problem |
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Definition
gender is meant to oppress women (see Lorber) |
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Lucal 1999 What she sees as a goal |
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Definition
Not create a new category, just expand the two categories to be more broad. |
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Lucal 1999 Gender misattribution |
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Definition
when you misattribute the wrong gender to someone who is the other gender |
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Lorber 1994 (interactional perspective) Definition of gender |
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Definition
Social position and actions based on position |
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Lorber 1994 Gender bending and transsexuals |
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Definition
Challenge gender system, what gender means. |
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(gender creates social differences -- learned.), stratification (ranking system, leads to inequality), and structure( gender is a system, a social order) |
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Ridgeway and Correll 2004 (institutional perspective) Definition of gender |
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Definition
Gender is an institutionalized set of practice |
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Ridgeway and Correll 2004 Gender beliefs (hegemonic and alternative) |
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Definition
the beliefs or rules that take into the situations. · Social relational contexts: the arena or the situation. |
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THE HUNGER GAMES ANALOGY: |
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Definition
Gender: two districts, one for each gender Gender beliefs: the rules that are set and can’t change (for example; kill everyone). Social Relational Contexts: The hunger games arena may change, but the rules don’t. |
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Ridgeway and Correll 2004 Is change possible? Should it happen? How would it happen? |
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Definition
It can’t happen because people carry their beliefs with them to each new arena. |
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Risman 2004 (institutional perspective) Strengths of the “gender as a structure” perspective |
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Definition
No theory warfare, multilevel, provide a direction for change. |
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Risman 2004 Intersectionality (definition and example) |
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Definition
Can’t analyze in isolation, multiple inequalities coming from different directions. Race, class, ethnicity, sexuality, culture. |
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Risman 2004 Is change possible? Should it happen? How would it happen? |
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Definition
Egalitarian couples - equal it is hard. There are consequences -- individual level personalities have to match, interactional level friends have to be supportive,institutional level jobs and economic structures have to be flexible and supportive. |
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England 2010 (institutional perspective) What changes have happened? |
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Definition
Women are working. Women elected to political office. Socialization of children is changing. Upper and middle class women move into masculine jobs. |
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England 2010 What changes haven't happened? |
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Definition
Men are not working into feminine jobs. dating and relationships have not changed their gendered system. |
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England 2010 Why hasn't things happened? |
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Definition
because of devaluation of women’s jobs. |
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England 2010 Gender Essentialism |
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Definition
Gender essentialism stalls desegregation in the workplace. When women move into jobs, those jobs are paid less overtime. why shifts aren’t happening, because we believe that all gender differences are naturally and biologically created. |
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