250 likes | 339 Views
Chapter 11. Sex and Gender. What We Will Learn. To what extent does biology influence maleness and femaleness? Are males dominant over females in all societies? How similar are gender roles throughout the world? Do women and men in the same culture communicate differently?
E N D
Chapter 11 Sex and Gender
What We Will Learn • To what extent does biology influence maleness and femaleness? • Are males dominant over females in all societies? • How similar are gender roles throughout the world? • Do women and men in the same culture communicate differently? • How can extreme gender ideology lead to the exploitation of women?
Gender • Refers to the way the two sexes are perceived, evaluated, and expected to behave. • There is a wide range of ideas about what it means to be feminine or masculine. • U.S. culture recognizes only two genders, male and female, but other cultures recognize a combined male/female gender.
Cultural Patterns of Homosexuality- U.S. • Cultural definition of male homosexuality does not make a distinction between preference and activity. • It is assumed that a man who chooses to engage in homosexual activity does so due to a dominant homosexual preference. • 9.1% of males surveyed reported some homosexuality during their lifetime, only 2.8% claimed a homosexual preference and identity.
Cultural Patterns of Homosexuality: Azande • Due to a shortage of women, Azande men sought sexual satisfaction, for a limited time, through homosexual activity. • Unmarried men serving in military units often married boys between the ages of 12 and 20. • These “male wives” performed household chores and served as sexual partners. • When the husband was old enough to take a female wife, marriage to the “boy-wife” ended, and both were free to marry a woman.
Cultural Patterns of Homosexuality: Sambia • Defines male homosexuality as a requirement before men assume masculine roles and heterosexual relationships. • Sambian women are viewed as sexually dangerous because they can sap a man of his semen. • Before a boy can develop into a male adult, he must receive ingestions of semen from older men, for 6 to 8 years during adolescence.
Gender Roles • Men have greater body mass and strength and are better equipped for hunting, warfare, and land clearing. • Women do tasks that are compatible with pregnancy, breastfeeding, and child care.
Gender Inequality • 2/3 of all the illiterate people in the world today are women. • The world’s women are concentrated in the lowest-paid occupations and receive less pay and fewer benefits than men. • Women are more likely to work part-time, have less seniority, and occupy positions with little or no upward mobility.
Gender Ideology • Thoughts and values that legitimize gender roles, statuses, and customary behavior. • In some African societies, men’s physical well-being is thought to be jeopardized by contact with a woman’s menstrual discharge. • In Bangladesh, men are associated with the right side and women with the left side, a dichotomy that also denotes purity–pollution, good–bad, and authority– submission.
Women and Inequality • Women makeup 1/2 the world’s population but, • do approximately 2/3 of the work. • earn 1/10 of the world’s income. • own less than 1% of the world’s property.
Entrance of Women Into the Workforce: Key Factors • As industrialization became more complex, more clerical workers were needed, most were women. • Women bore fewer children, increasing the number of years they could work outside the home.
Entrance of Women Into the Workforce: Key Factors • Rising rate of divorce forced women to support themselves and their children. • The baby bottle enabled women to work outside the home without jeopardizing their infants. • Two salaries are often needed to make ends meet.
Occupational Segregation Along Gender Lines • Majority of women in the U.S. are in low-paying jobs. • Women make up: • 90% of nurses • 80% of librarians • 70% of teachers • 1% of corporate CEOs • 6% of partners in private law firms • 8% of state and federal judges
Earnings Gap in the U.S. • Wages for full-time female employees are only 74% of wages for full-time male employees. • This is up from 6% during the 1960s. • The median income for full-time female employees was $26,855 in 2000 as compared with $36,252 for men. • Even in professions that require high levels of training and education women earn less than their male counterparts.
1. _______ refers to cultural ideas concerning the way members of two sexes are perceived, evaluated, and expected to behave. • Gender • Masculine and feminine • Sexual dimorphism • Sex
Answer: a • Gender refers to cultural ideas concerning the way members of two sexes are perceived, evaluated, and expected to behave.
2. In some cultures, ________ are rigidly defined, while in others they overlap to a considerable degree. • gender definitions • gender roles • sexual roles • sexuality rules
Answer: b • In some cultures, gender roles are rigidly defined, while in others they overlap to a considerable degree.
3. ______ is a system of thoughts and values that legitimize gender roles, statuses, and customary behavior. • Gender ideology • Gender asymmetry • Gender identity • Gender roles
Answer: a • Gender ideology is a system of thoughts and values that legitimize gender roles, statuses, and customary behavior.
4. Gender and sex both refer to the same thing. • True • False
Answer: false • Gender and sex do not refer to the same thing.
5. Differences in the status of men and women, or _________________ , exists in some form in all cultures.
Answer: gender stratification • Differences in the status of men and women, or gender stratification, exists in some form in all cultures.