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 85
Page 23
... roles . Sociologists use the concept of social roles to refer to cul- turally prescribed expectations , duties , and rights that define the relationship between a person in a particular position and the other people with whom she or he ...
... roles . Sociologists use the concept of social roles to refer to cul- turally prescribed expectations , duties , and rights that define the relationship between a person in a particular position and the other people with whom she or he ...
Page 246
... roles , resistance to women as clergy has declined over time ( Chaves and Cavendish , 1997 ) . Because women are ... roles . Studies of women ministers and rabbis find that women in these roles do tend to have a more collaborative style ...
... roles , resistance to women as clergy has declined over time ( Chaves and Cavendish , 1997 ) . Because women are ... roles . Studies of women ministers and rabbis find that women in these roles do tend to have a more collaborative style ...
Page 305
... roles in combat and other nontraditional military employment . African Americans are less supportive of women's roles in combat than are Whites , and women are more supportive than men ( see Figure 10.3 ) . White men who have been in ...
... roles in combat and other nontraditional military employment . African Americans are less supportive of women's roles in combat than are Whites , and women are more supportive than men ( see Figure 10.3 ) . White men who have been in ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Gender Sex and Culture | 19 |
The Social Construction | 51 |
Copyright | |
13 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
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