September 9

th

 Attendance & participation cards

 Lead class discussion sign up

 Homework Discussion: What is feminism?

 Lecture One: The Gendered Society

 Homework:

“White Privilege and Male Privilege” by Peggy

McIntosh (CR)

What is feminism?

"The feminist agenda is not about equal rights for women. It is about a socialist, anti-family political movement that encourages women to leave their husbands, kill their children, practice witchcraft, destroy capitalism, and become lesbians"

- Pat Robertson at the GOP

Convention (1992)

Feminism is…

 The belief that we are individuals before we are men and women.

 That there are differences among males and females.

 That these differences should not be the foundation for inequality in society.

September 14

th

 Attendance & participation cards

Lead class discussion sign up

Research project #1

Review last activity

Lecture One: The Gendered Society

 Homework:

Chapter Two, Ordained by Nature (GS)

The Medical Construction of Gender by Suzanne

Kessler (CR)

Lecture One

Gendered Society: The Intersection of

Power and Difference

Understanding Gender

 Gender: social differences assigned to people of different sexes

 Idealized Gender: the physical, emotional, and behavioral traits assigned to gender categories

Masculinity and Femininity

Looking at Sex

 Sex: biological differences between people

Chromosomes (XX vs. XY)

Sex glands

Hormones

Reproductive capacity

Secondary physical characteristics

 But is sex that clear cut?

2% of babies are born intersexed

Transgender individuals do not feel that their sex and gender match

Sexual Dichotomy

 We have a belief in the essential reality of sexual dichotomy

 Division of gender and sex into two categories: M/F

Biologically determined

Permanent

Universal

Exhaustive

Mutually exclusive

Commercialization of Sex Dichotomy

Women “defend”

Men “protect”

Gender Polarization

 Gender Polarization: organization of social life around male/female distinctions

Social roles

Sexual decisions and partners

Emotional expression

 Gender-schematic: decisions are based upon a society’s polarized definitions of masculinity and femininity

The Gendered Individual

Gender as a social position – a place in society

Constrains what we think our choices are and how others think about who we are and how we should act

Social positions come with an inherent set of advantages and disadvantages

What are they for men? For women?

Power and Privilege

 Gender, as well as race, class, and sexuality are one of the primary ways that power and privilege are exercised in American society

 Privilege: one’s social position in society is seen as “normal” and objective

Privilege emerges from the social positions we occupy and not from innate qualities of individuals

Structures of privilege are often invisible and unearned

What does Kimmel mean when he says: “I enjoyed the privilege of invisibility? (pg 7)?

 Male Dominance is:

An unrecognized set of privileges

A set of unnamed practices – the cultural norm

A standpoint from which all people are judged

Invisible Privileges

“As a white person, I realized I had been taught about racism as something that puts others at a disadvantage, but had been taught not to see one of its corollary aspects, white privilege, which puts me at an advantage.”

 Types of Privileges according to McIntosh:

 positive advantage : one that all individuals in society should have

 negative advantage: one that can only be gained at the expense of others

Individual exercise:

List at least 5 privileges that you think you carry around in an invisible knapsack. These privileges can be based on the following structures of privilege:

White privilege

Male privilege

Physical Ability Privilege

Heterosexual Privilege

Religious Privilege

Other?

For each privilege explain if this privilege is a positive advantage (one that all individuals in society should have) or a negative advantage (one that can only be gained at the expense of others)? Explain.

In pairs:

(1)

Look over your list of privileges.

(2)

Do you enjoy all the privileges that your partner does? Why or why not?

(3)

How are your privileges similar and different from your partners? What accounts for those differences?

(1)

(1)

What institutions are these privileges realized in?

Family, economy, religion, politics?

Understanding Privilege

 Individuals with privilege are not responsible for the circumstances that brought them privilege, but they are responsible in how they respond to it.

 What does Kimmel mean when he says: We have to make men visible when we talk about gender (pg 5)?

A Gendered Society

 Gender is about difference and it is about power

In a patriarchal society gender is about the power men as a group have over women as a group

 Power: ability to influence important decisions and exert one’s will

Not the possession of individuals, but property of group life

But, what if I don’t feel powerful?

 Power is exercised through:

Institutions – what resources are available to us

Ideology – what we think should be

Culture – what we value

 Heteronormativity: culture where heterosexuality is accepted as the “normal” mode of sexual expression

Intersectionality

 We need to understand the experience of individuals at the intersection of:

 Gender : social differences to people of different sexes

Sexuality : sexual identity and sexual orientation

Race: classification of individuals based on their physical characteristics

 Class: s ocial and economic standing in society

Macroscopic Perspective

 Audre Lorde – appreciate the differences among women as well as the their common position in society

 Birdcage Metaphor