Gender as a Social Construct Essay

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    Nurture Debate

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    the main influence on gender development? Biologists and other organic researchers have contended that hereditary qualities and hormones foreordain nearly everything about gender and sexual orientation, while psychologists and sociologist claim environmental factors are responsible. Keep in mind, three factors are responsible for gender development that includes biology, natural selection, and the environment. While each of these approaches has made their contribution to gender development,…

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    Judith Butler Analysis

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    based on a deliberate inclusion and exclusion of information, which in turn forms social norms. Butler applies this concept to gender. How we act in certain situations depends on the social constructs that surround us (discourse), and “our acting of our role playing is crucial to the gender that we are” (Butler, 1998) e.g. Men acting masculine, and women being feminine. We act this way because we feel based on social expectations that we are obliged to act a…

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    As we said in class, some people do not classified as strictly male or female because of the inequality and systematic role that portrays in the U.S. society. For that, some people experiences gender transitioning. What is gender Transitions? Between both male and female is generalized as “Genderqueer” Neither man or women. Many Transgender and Queer communities today are not unusual but outside those communities the reality of a white guy having long prideful lesbian past can be bit…

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    Gender appears to be a concept that is either black or white – but in actuality is a very controversial area of analysis. For hundreds of years gender and gender equality have been a topic of interest. Today, the interest has grown and spread to various social media platforms with an emphasis on the feminist social movement. However, in order to understand gender inequality, one must first understand the theories behind the mobilization and creation of this social phenomenon. Charlotte Perkins…

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    against Aboriginal Women in Canada The rates of violence against aboriginal women is attributed to the intersectional, systemic oppression in societal construct and deep rooted racial discrimination in Canadian society. Through analyzation of recent academic articles and sources; core relating ideologies converge on the theme that social construct, ethnic marginalization and systemic racialization are factors which attribute with the victimization of violence in aboriginal women in Canada.…

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    of Binaries in the Holistic Understanding of Gender By Pranadewi Amarindra It is impossible to navigate through everyday life without encountering gendered social relations. This is because gender is the focus of many of society’s arrangements, and is one of the primary features of modern societal institutions (Goffman 1977). These encounters of gender are often seen in the relational performance of gender norms (Crawley, Foley & Shehan 2007). Gender norms represent a collection of traditional…

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    “Introduction to Beyond the Natural Body” written by Nelly Oudshoorn and “The egg and the Sperm” written by Emily both emphasize the idea of a woman’s body being examined through a social construct instead of a science classification. In the 1970’s, the female body was explained in terms of how the male body was perceived, for example: in texts written by the Ancient Greeks would refer the female genitals, the ovaries as the “female testicle”, as it used the male organs to lead every description…

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    Budgeon: A Summary

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    for understanding social change, Budgeon (2014) highlights how biological gender variations are transformed into salient constructs through the primacy of a social binary that distinguished between ‘man’ and ‘woman’, and that this constructed binary underpins many social changes. Shifts and changes in job opportunities available to young man and women can be understood through applications of this gendered framework. Over time, the cultural current has shifted such that past gender constraints…

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    Budgeon: A Summary

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    As a framework for understanding social change, Budgeon (2014) highlights how apparent biological gender variations transform into salient constructs through the primacy of a social binary that distinguished between ‘man’ and ‘woman’, and that this constructed binary underpins social change. Shifts in the individualisation thesis can be understood through this gendered framework. Through the individualisation thesis the emergence of new choices available to young people can be explained by the…

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    person of color in my class and had to speak in behalf of my whole class. My own personal experiences reflected the theme of race as a social construct, because your own perception of race is influenced by others perception of your race, as it reinforces your own awareness of your race and the power that belongs to…

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