Top Banner
From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez
38

From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Dec 18, 2015

Download

Documents

Adelia Palmer
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

From Sex to Gender

L. I. Hernandez

Page 2: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Sex From Latin secare, to divide.

Used to refer to:

Sexual intercourse Male/female

Page 3: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

What is a biological

male?

What is a biological

female?

Page 4: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.
Page 5: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Is biological sex

just male &

female?

Page 6: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

17 different chromosomal combinations XX XY XO - Turners syndrome XXY - Klinefelters syndrome Society labels many of these other

chromosomal combinations as intersex categories.

Page 7: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.
Page 8: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.
Page 9: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.
Page 10: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.
Page 11: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.
Page 12: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.
Page 13: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.
Page 14: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.
Page 15: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.
Page 16: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.
Page 17: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.
Page 18: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.
Page 19: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Gender: origins of the word

Gender: from Latin generare, to beget. Originally used as a linguistic term (e.g., in many European languages, words have gender, e.g., in Spanish el for male, la for female.

Page 20: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Gender: origins of the word

Gender redefined in the 1970s to refer to socially-constructed and socially-defined categories, roles, statuses.

Page 21: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Gender

Socially defined categories, roles and statuses for, as well as relations between and among people.

Think of the different categories in your country. Use the local terms. (Just write them down now, for further discussion.)

Page 22: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Tagalog gender categories

Lalake (male) Babae (female) Bakla, syoki (an effeminate male) Gay (homosexual) Tibo (a masculine female) Silahis (a bisexual) Bisexual, macho gay (a gay man who

is not effeminate)

Page 23: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Transgenders

Many societies have transgender categories, e.g., kathoey (Thai, Lao), waria (Indonesia), bakla (Philippines). These categories are often erroneously translated as “gay” or “homosexual”.

Page 24: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Gender is NOT sexual orientation alone

Anatomy Body movements Clothing Personality Occupations “Sexual attraction”

Page 25: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Gender is embodied

Because most people are male or female, societies tend to combine sex and gender into a dichotomy, based on genitals. We as individuals, also think of gender roles in that dichotomy: males penetrate, females are penetrated; males dominate, females submit.

Page 26: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Gender and society

We learn about gender categories, roles, statuses through social institutions: family, community, religion, etc.

Page 27: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Gender & socialization

We teach gender roles through many ways: Act like a man. Be more lady-like. Why are you crying? Are you a bakla? Oh men are like that. . .let the old goat

eat grass in the next field, as long as they don’t bring home the other goat.

Page 28: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Gender and the State

Laws, policies, all reinforce existing gender norms, e.g., anti-abortion laws are often more concerned about female chastity and family honor than fetal life.

Page 29: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Gender relations

Gender is relational: <male> would not be conceptualized if there were no <female>.

Relations among genders vary from one culture to another.

Page 30: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Gender relations & society

Gender relations interact with other social divisions, e.g., divisions by class, caste, religion, ethnicity, age. Thus, an upper-class Thai urban woman would be more powerful than the male mayor of a small Thai town. She would also become more powerful with age.

Page 31: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Gender & culture

Culture: beliefs and practices passed from one generation to another.

Culture uses gender attributes for language, food, architecture, etc.

Example from Thai language: kha (female); kop (male) in sentences, depending on the speaker.

Page 32: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Gender ideology

Society tells us what each gender SHOULD be and SHOULD NOT be.

Gender ideology is reinforced by society and culture, through language (chairman, businessman, etc.) religion (who can become priests or monks, who cannot), politics (Ah, enough of women presidents!), etc.

Page 33: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.
Page 34: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.
Page 35: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Gendered expressions of biology

Why is HIV more prevalent in younger females and older males?

Why do hospital-acquired infections of HIV affect more females than males?

In percentages, why do more women victims of intimate partner violence die, than men?

Page 36: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Differentiating sex and gender allows us to reflect on:

Nature (biology) and nurture (society)

Are there attributes that are essentially male/female? Or are these socially constructed?

Page 37: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.

Gender trouble (Judith Butler)

Gender “floats” – we are constantly redefining gender, in ourselves and in others. We renegotiate, reinvent gender.

Page 38: From Sex to Gender L. I. Hernandez. Sex  From Latin secare, to divide. Used to refer to: Sexual intercourse Male/female.