Thinking about Women: Sociological Perspectives on Sex and Gender* 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
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Page 6
Public issues involve the structure of social institutions and their historical development . ... this is an indication of a structural issue having to do with the institutions of marriage and the family and other institutions that bear ...
Public issues involve the structure of social institutions and their historical development . ... this is an indication of a structural issue having to do with the institutions of marriage and the family and other institutions that bear ...
Page 7
Only when you step back from the cage and look at its structure as a whole - seeing all of the parts in relationship to each other - can you understand why the bird cannot escape the cage . As Frye writes , it is then perfectly obvious ...
Only when you step back from the cage and look at its structure as a whole - seeing all of the parts in relationship to each other - can you understand why the bird cannot escape the cage . As Frye writes , it is then perfectly obvious ...
Page 74
Because they are outsiders within , women of color can generate new forms of insight and make visible those structures of oppression that are less apparent to members of more privileged groups . à Gender , Science , and Society ...
Because they are outsiders within , women of color can generate new forms of insight and make visible those structures of oppression that are less apparent to members of more privileged groups . à Gender , Science , and Society ...
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Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Gender Sex and Culture | 19 |
The Social Construction | 51 |
Copyright | |
10 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
activity African American analysis argue attitudes basis become behavior beliefs biological birth Black child church color constructed context create crime culture defined deviance dominant economic effect emerge equal example expectations experience explain fact female feminism feminist force gender girls groups historical household human ideas identity images important increased individual influence institutions issues knowledge labor lesbian less liberal lives major male means men's mothers movement nature oppression organization patterns percent period perspective political position practices problems production questions race radical rape rates reflect relations relationships religion religious reproductive result roles seen sexual shows social society sociological status structure studies tend theory thought tion traditional understanding United values violence White woman women workers young