SOC 207 Lecture Notes - Lecture 10: Deindustrialization, Campus Of The University Of Oregon, Sexual Assault
Document Summary
The system of social forces that structure how being male or female affects what is expected of you, how you are treated, and what opportunities you have. The psychological, social, and cultural aspects of masculinity and femininity. Basis for distribution of resources and opportunities. Gender, race, and class identities and systems of social stratification are all intertwined. To study gender from this perspective is to take an intersectional approach. Essentialist: gender is based on biology, in differences in anatomy, chromosomes, hormones, and biology explains observable social differences between men and women. Social constructionist: social processes create gender differences and gender inequality. Through small group interaction, socialization, schooling, media representations, religions, economic opportunities, and the policies of governments, a gender system establishes and reproduces the expectations of a person and rewards based on one"s sex. Globally: 66% of women"s labor is unpaid compared to 34% of men"s labor. Housework and childrearing constitute the bulk of unpaid labor.