Thinking about Women: Sociological Perspectives on Sex and GenderAllyn and Bacon, 2000 - 434 pages * Contains a new section on language, gender, and popular culture (Ch. 3). * Includes new material on sexuality, including bisexuality and transgendered identities (Ch. 4). * Updates the discussion of sex, gender, and sexuality as central concepts (Ch. 2). * Provides a clearer discussion of the relationship between biology and culture (Ch. 2). * Incorporates new information on welfare reform, teen pregnancy, and poverty among women (Ch. 5). * Emphasizes more fully the influence of postmodernism and the social construction of gender (Ch. 13). * Features new suggested readings, but retains the classics. * Integrates updated research throughout, including new graphics. * Maintains a strong and integrated focus on race, class, and gender throughout. * Includes the most current scholarship on gender. * Retains its clear and lively writing style, written specifically for an undergraduate audience. * Provides Discussion Questions/Projects for Thought at the end of each chapter. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 82
Page 176
... Black families has its origins in the past , then we should expect the family to be less stable as we move backward in time . To test this assumption , Gutman traced five generations of kin as they adapted to the changes of postslavery ...
... Black families has its origins in the past , then we should expect the family to be less stable as we move backward in time . To test this assumption , Gutman traced five generations of kin as they adapted to the changes of postslavery ...
Page 177
... Black women worked as servants and 20 percent as laundresses ( Katzman , 1978 : 74 ) . Black women's labor thus made them steady providers for their family . As the twentieth century developed , continuing patterns of unemployment , the ...
... Black women worked as servants and 20 percent as laundresses ( Katzman , 1978 : 74 ) . Black women's labor thus made them steady providers for their family . As the twentieth century developed , continuing patterns of unemployment , the ...
Page 317
... Black women ended up working in movements that were even more male dominated and less open to an examination of gender inequality . For Black women , the Black power movement explicitly appealed to the power of Black men and the role of ...
... Black women ended up working in movements that were even more male dominated and less open to an examination of gender inequality . For Black women , the Black power movement explicitly appealed to the power of Black men and the role of ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Gender Sex and Culture | 19 |
The Social Construction | 51 |
Copyright | |
13 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
abortion African American African American women analysis argue Asian American attitudes basis behavior beliefs biological birth Black women child church contemporary context create culture defined deviance dominant economic edited example fact female feminist perspective feminist theory gays and lesbians Gender & Society gender identity gender relations gender roles girls groups Harriet Taylor Mill heterosexual Hispanic homophobia household housework human ideas ideology images inequality influence labor force Latino lesbian liberal feminism lives male marriage Marx men's mothers organization patriarchal patterns percent political postmodernist race racial radical feminism radical feminist rape relationships religion religious reproductive Sex Roles sexist sexual social change social construction social structure socialist socialist feminism sociological sociologists stereotypes studies tion traditional U.S. Census Bureau University Press violence White women woman women of color women's experiences women's roles workers York