Gender Stratification Men and women differ in their access to
privilege, prestige, and power. The distribution
problem of who gets what, when, and how has
traditionally been answered in favor of males.
Sex is a biologically determined characteristic;
gender is a socially constructed characteristic.
All societies use anatomical differences to
assign gender roles. Gender identities are the
conceptions we have of ourselves as being male
or female. - Sexism and Patriarchy Sexism
operates at both an individual level and an
institutional level. The most pervasive form of
institutional sexism is patriarchy.Women
exhibit four of the five properties associated
with a minority group.
- Gender Inequality around theWorld No nation treats its women as well as
its men. Women in many countries suffer
discrimination and abuse, yet women around
the world do considerably better than U.S.
women in some areas.
- Gender Inequality in the UnitedStates U.S. women have made substantial
gains over the past decades but continue to do
most of the household work and child rearing.
Despite increasing involvement in the paid
workforce, women continue to be excluded
from top jobs and to earn less than men. Sexual
harassment remains a common workplace
hazard for women, and somewhere between
10 and 25 percent of women have been raped.
Men still dominate U.S. political life.
Sources of Gender Differences Gender roles can be seen as arising from
biological development or cultural contributions. - Gender and Biology The biological
aspects of gender consist of the physical
differences between men and women, but the
role biology plays in producing behavioral
differences between men and women is
shrouded in controversy.
- Gender and Culture Gender roles
probably represent the earliest division of labor
among humans. Various societies have specific
social definitions of approprate behavior for
males and females.
- Gender Identities Gender identities are
the concepts we have of ourselves as being
male or female. Theories of the acquisition of
gender identities include Freudian, cultural
transmission, and cognitive-development.
Differences in self-construal may explain
gender differences in the United States.
Sociological Perspectives on Gender Stratification The major sociological perspectives offer
interpretations of gender stratification that
resemble and parallel their positions on class
and racial or ethnic stratification. - The Functionalist Perspective
Functionalists suggest that families are
organized along instrumental-expressive lines,
with men specializing in instrumental tasks and
women in expressive tasks.
- The Conflict Perspective Conflict
theorists contend that a sexual division of labor
is a social vehicle devised by men to ensure
themselves of privilege, prestige, and power in
their relationships with women.
- The Interactionist Perspective
Interactionists argue that gender inequality
persists because of the way we define men and
women and their appropriate roles in society.
Language helps perpetuate inequality.
- The Feminist Perspective Feminism is
not a single theory but an evolving set of
theoretical perspectives. Feminists argue that
women are disadvantaged because society is
patriarchal; the assignment of group differences
is socially costly and repressive. Everyday
interactions between men and women recreate
and support the gender system.
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