GWSS 257 EXAM 1,

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How does homophobia perpetuate traditional masculinity?

Fear of being perceived as gay makes men exaggerate traditional rules of masculinity even if they do not want to

How did Darwin's research influence beliefs?

helped rationalize male privilege and reinforce female dependence

what is metacognition?

-thinking about one's own thinking or thinking processes

True or False: According to the definition used in this class (including the readings), feminism includes the goal of defining masculinity broadly, in a way that incorporates a wide variety of authentic expression and experience

True

True or False: An intersectional approach is necessary for understanding human experiences at both the individual and institutional levels

True

True or False: Gender appearance norms are racialized and classed for political, social, and commerical purposes

True

where did modern stereotypes originate

Victorian/Edwardian era

Quantitative methods: descriptive research

describes, does not explain, behavior

Quantitative methods: correlation research

examines the relationship between variables

Feminism and Psychology

"'Feminism in its most glorious, transformative, inclusive sense, is not about man-hating...' but about educated choices for men as well as for women, genuine equality, and a vision of gender roles that allow individuals to become their most authentic selves." - Courtney Martin

What is philosopher Hannah Arendt's view on power?

"Power corresponds to the human ability not just to act but act in concert. Power is never the property of an individual; it belongs to a group and remains in existence only so long as the group keeps together"

Racism is a product of ___________

"a system involving cultural messages and institutional policies and practices as well as the beliefs and actions of an individual" -prejudice + bigotry + power = ______

Media rep. of latinos and Native American men

"others" who threaten the culture of white masculinity, marauding savages, powerless, pitiful, self-destructive, subordinate to white men

Which of the following statements best describes how the term "queer" is used within queer theory?

"queer" can be understood as a political position, as well as a social identity; "queer" destabilizes the relationship between gender and sexuality

what is the "mythical norm"?

"usually defined as white, thin, male, young, heterosexual, christian, and financially secure"

Third-wave feminism

- 1990's - present Focus on diversity within feminism - Rejection of a single definition of femininity - Includes social issues which disproportionately affect women: Poverty & classism, Violence against women, Racism, Exploitation, Homophobia and intolerance, Continuing patriarchal dominance

How does historical context affect social identity?

- Individual experience is shaped by the when and where in which we live - To fully conceptualize the experience and effects of a social identity, we must consider what it means to experience that identity in a particular time and place

Intersectionality

- Interactive matrix of the multiple aspects of one's social identities - creates a unique identity and lived experience - produces a unique individual with unique perspectives

Recognizing privilage

- Privilege does not come from an individual's own efforts or activities... it comes along with basic identity characteristics that we have little control over - Privilege doesn't grant final achievements; it dictates the opportunities that are readily available to an individual, in order to work directly toward their goals - Discomfort around recognizing their privilege makes some people deny that they have any

Second-wave influence on psychology

- Shifted focus from cataloging gender-related differences to a new interest in understanding women and gender, in social context - Reformation of scientific practices - Several female psychologists contributed to this shift: Naomi Weisstein, Rhoda Unger, Carol Gilligan, Sandra Bem, Janet Shibley Hyde

What is privilege?

- Sociopolitical structure wherein people of a specific social identity are granted benefits not granted to people of other social identities. - These benefits are most commonly: Power - to determine the attitudes, values, and policies of the society Opportunity - to attain or maintain preferred positions and status Benefits are not earned through effort or virtue - Simply attached to certain social identities - Privilege mainly exists outside the consciousness of the group that has it - Easily recognized by the group that does not have it - Privilege is NOT: Advantages earned through one's own choices, activities, and effort/Temporary benefits that come at personal costs

Men's movements

- Spawned in response to the feminist movements - Diverse, mostly unaffiliated, have not independently prompted significant social change or effect on psychology - Some support feminist goals - Seek alternative models of masculinity - Support equality in society - Work to identify and dismantle oppressive cultural structures Some actively oppose feminism - Focus on restoring traditional gender roles and power differences - Ex. Men's rights activists

Psychology and intersectionality

- a difficult and necessary relationship - To study a human experience, psychology must consider how each element of an individual's identity influences the expression and experience of every other element. - How does your race influence how you experience your gender identity? - How does your ability/disability status influence the expression of your sexual orientation? - How does your citizenship influence your experience as a student? - How does your ethnicity and gender influence your paycheck?

What is social identity?

- characteristics that make up the identity that interacts with others - gender, ethnicity, religion, age, orientation, vocation, socioeconomic status, political affiliation, ability, etc. - social identities can CHANGE - influenced by developmental background and present circumstances: family life, educational opportunities, neighborhood, etc. - current life circumstances influence the social identities that are most important to us - situationally dependente - CODE SWITCHING (how we act in different places based on our gender identity) this demonstrates how we emphasize different identities in different contexts

What is gender?

- social label - large portion of our identity - culturally and biologically influenced - CENTRAL SOCIAL IDENTITY - categorical sex vs Sex

What is stereotype threat?

-Aronson and Steele -Self-fulfilling fear that one will be evaluated based on a negative stereotype.

What is the gender schema theory?

-Bem -societies vary greatly in the degree to which they organize people's thinking along gendered lines by classifying more or fewer kinds of behavior, clothing, feelings, interests, and even inanimate objects as either masculine or feminine rather than neutral

What is Real Manhood?

-work place sphere -characteristics: no "feminine" traits, successful, confident, aggressive -masculinity was/is attained and measured by power over others

When and why did MODERN gender stereotypes originate?

-Lae 1800s/Early 1900s (victorian era) -dramatic social change -"threats" to wealthy, white, male hegemony resulted the division of the "two spheres" by those with political/religious/scientific power

What is the "Woman's Journal"?

-Lucy Stone -longest lasting first wave feminist periodical

What is gender?

-a social label (behaviors and traits related, by a culture, to a biological sex; recognized by individuals for themselves) -a large portion of our identity (how we view ourselves, how we present ourselves, how others perceive us) -culturally and biologically influenced

what is the lotus blossom stereotype?

-about Asian women -passive, sex object -exotic beauty aimed at white male gaze

what is the dragon ladies stereotype?

-about asian women -sexy criminal -object of white male gaze, exotic

what is the sapphire stereotype?

-about black women -angry -originated in order for white people to say black women drove their own families away, used not to blame black women for woes of poverty, incarceration, etc.

What is the Jezebel stereotype?

-about black women -hyper sexual -originated in order for slaveowners to justify rape

What is privilege NOT?

-advantages earned through one's own choices, activities, and effort -temporary benefits that come at personal costs

When do gender stereotypes develop?

-age 2-3: rigid understanding of gender, based on immediate experiences -age 4-7: focus on categorizing gender differences (gender stereotyping begins about age 6-7) -age 8-10: children develop complex abstractions about gender traits -adolescence: identity development is a major social and cognitive goal (to figure "who" we are) -young teens over-commit to gender roles, relax later in adolescence

What is a social identity?

-characteristics that make up the identity that interacts with others (intersectional !!) -influenced by developmental background and present circumstances -situationally dependent (homosocial v. heterosocial settings and code switching)

Why do gender stereotypes develop?

-cognitively b/c stereotypes are specific schemas and are strengthened by illusory correlations

What is morphological infantilism?

-created by Darwin -idea that women, being smaller than men, are morphologically (physically) more like infants and children than are men

What are gender stereotypes?

-culturally shared beliefs and expectations about the traits and behaviors males and females -socially assigned, based on sex -based on essentialist claims "difference" -establish and maintain gender norms (set behavioral criteria)

What are qualitative methods?

-descriptions of experiences and phenomena are based on observations and interactions with the subject(s) -provide in-depth illustrations of unique experiences -more subjective (not applicable to all people) -does not reduce observations to numerical data

What are the focuses and goals of fourth wave feminism?

-focus on intersectionality and justice -uses digital tools and social media -continued emphasis on issues that reflect and maintain social inequality (poverty/classism/structural inequities, assault, racism, sexism, reproductive rights, educational access, exploitation, intolerance, continuing patriarchal dominance) -emphasis: dismantling systems of oppression

How do gender identity and gender roles differ?

-gender identity: internal, personal sense of self as gendered -gender roles: social norms and expectations based on categorical sex

What is the Cult of True Womanhood?

-home and family sphere -virtues: piety, purity, submissiveness, domesticity -contrast with the "fallen woman" -only for christians and affluent woman

What are some stereotypical representations of Latinx women?

-hypersexualized, spitfire character (had little to no power) -abuela character (religious, emotional, nervous) -exotic seductress (most "dangerous"--threatening to seduce white men)

What is intersectionality and what makes it critical?

-interactive matrix incorporating all of a person's identity elements (creates unique individual identities) -important b/c no single facet of identity -- on its own -- can explain an individual's experience

What three subgroups made up second wave feminism?

-liberal feminists -radical feminists -cultural feminists

UW recognizes decimal grades between:

0.7 and 4.0

what does a genderqueer identity entail?

-may (or may not) choose to adopt new public person and may also seek intentional androgyny in fashion -often align themselves with aspect of queer theory advocating mutability of identity and oppose ostracizing generalizations about groups

What is the cultivation theory?

-media representations socialize our perceptions -repeated exposure = familiar -familiar = reality

What is the difference between micro and macro in terms of social issues?

-micro: individual, local perspective -macro: structural, institutional, and global perspective

What is patriarchy?

-natural extension of misogyny -"the rule of the fathers" (Old Testament) -a society in which men dominate the major institutions

What benefits are given to those with privilege?

-power: to determine the attitudes, values, and policies of the society -opportunity: to attain/maintain preferred positions and status (NOT the final achievements) -NOT EARNED THROUGH EFFORT OR VIRTUE

What have marriage promotion programs not worked in?

-promoting marriage -preventing divorce -lifting women out of poverty

What is a case study?

-qualitative method -in-depth description of one subject

What is an enthnography?

-qualitative method -in-depth study of a group

what is an interview?

-qualitative method -open-ended questions and discussion with an individual

What is a focus group?

-qualitative method -questions for, and discussion within, a group

What is descriptive research?

-quantitative method -describes behavior (does NOT explain)

What is experimental research?

-quantitative method -determines causation by manipulating variables and measuring effects

What is correlation research?

-quantitative method -examines relationship between variables

What were the focuses and goals of third wave feminism?

-rejection of a single definition of femininity (very key!) -rejection of mass-marketed culture/focus on DIY culture (ex: zines) -includes social issues that disproportionately affect women (poverty/classism, violence against women, racism, exploitation, homophobia/intolerance, continuing patriarchal dominance)

what are quantitative methods?

-rely on data to draw generalizable conclusions -seeks to maintain objectivity -uses empirical evidence (data observable by anyone)

What did Carol Gilligan study?

-second wave CULTURAL feminist psychologist -included feminine qualities in an egalitarian society -agenda that would recognize the differences that do exist but removing the idea that one is better than the other

What did Sandra Bem study?

-second wave feminist psychologist -"men are the center of research, why?" -questioned why only men were used in studies

What did Naomi Weisstein study?

-second wave feminist psychologist -bias and sexism in research: research done to "prove" their own biases correct -focus on context (environment)

What did Janet Shibley Hyde study?

-second wave feminist psychologist -challenged "differences" model -men are more alike on psychological levels -stop focusing on differences start looking at similarities

What did Rhoda Unger study?

-second wave feminist psychologist -distinguished sex from gender and gender from sex

How did second wave feminism influence psychology?

-shifted focus from cataloging gender-related differences to a new interest in understanding women and gender, in social context -reformation fo scientific practices -several female psychologists contributed to this shift

Who is Michael Kimmel?

-sociologist on men's studies (anti-sexism but accused of sexism)

What are men's movements?

-spawned in response to the feminist movements -diverse, mostly unaffiliated, have not independently prompted significant social change or effect on psychology

What are some tools for critical thinking?

-start by cultivating a scientific attitude (be curious and skeptical) -guidelines: define terms, examine the evidence, analyze assumptions and biases, avoid emotional reasoning, do not oversimplify, consider other interpretations, tolerate uncertainty

How are stereotypes connected to illusory correlations?

-stereotypes prime illusory correlations (more likely to notice bad woman driver) -illusory correlations supports stereotypes

What does the term "unmarked group" refer to?

-the dominant group holds the privilege and don't get a label b/c they're considered the "norm"

What did the Equal Rights Amendment try to achieve?

1. Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the US or by any state on account of sex 2. the congress shall have the power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article 3. this amendment shall take effect in 2 years after date of ratification

What are some methodological errors that can skew results?

1. Experimenter Bias 2. misinterpreting cross-sectional research 3. misinterpreting longitudinal research 4. pretest-posttest 5. maturation 6. test-retest 7. order effect

What are some issues that rise when carrying out the study?

1. accuracy of instrument 2. "mortality" 3. self-reported observatios 4. the participants know too much 5. sampling error 6. experimenter bias

What is the Bechdel Test?

1. at least 2 women characters 2. who speak to each other 3. about something other than a man

What are some issues found when interpreting data?

1. cause and effect problems 2. different interpretations

What is the Russo Test?

1. contain a character who's recognizably LGBT 2. that character must not be defined solely by their sexual orientation or gender identity 3. they must be embedded in the narrative in a meaningful way, as opposed to being the object of humor

What are two dangerous assumptions in research on sex and gender?

1. that if we find a "sex difference" in some ability or kind of behavior, that means that all males do a particular thing of all females do some quite different thing 2. that psychological sex differences are biologically based and, therefore, inevitable and unchangeable

What event is seen as the beginning of first wave feminism?

1848, Seneca Falls, NY, Elizabeth Cady Stanton reads a document like the DOI but of woman's grievances of men (Declaration of Sentiments)

What year was Roe v. Wade?

1973

When was third wave feminism?

1990s-2000s (Gen X)

3rd wave feminism

1990s-present, focus on diversity within feminism, rejection of a single definition of feminism, includes social issues which disproportionally affect women: poverty, classism, violence against women, racism, exploitation, homophobia and intolerance, patriarchal dominance

A score of 75% translates to:

2.0

discussion section participation constitutes ______ of your grade

20%

When was fourth wave feminism?

2012 - present!

Men are ___ times more likely to commit suicide than women

3

Where is the UW Counseling Center located?

401 Schmitz Hall

Cisgender

A gender identity congruent with the sex assigned at birth

Transgender: Queer (Genderqueer)

A gender identity outside of the heteronormative, binary gender schema

Sex

A person's biological sex. The worlds male and female are used to describe sex categories, and are based on anatomy and physiology. Sex is almost invariably assigned at birth, based on appearance of an infant's genitals.

Which of the following is an erroneous assumption, made repeatedly throughout history, by researchers studying sex and gender?

All sex differences are biological

Which of the following is NOT an illustration of pseudopsychology?

An experimental study with college students found that entitled students are more likely to make requests for special favors from professors who are women, compared to professors who are men

Transgender

An umbrella term used for a variety of people who do not identify with, or conform to, the traditional gender roles of their culture. This term is often used as a broad category, including more specific identities

Prominent 2nd wave feminists

Betty Friedan and Simone de Beauvoir

Gender nonconformity (Gender variance)

Behavior or gender expression that does not conform to dominant gender norms of male and female. This may reflect rejection of some or all gender roles associated with one's assigned sex

Influence of stereotypes?

Behaviors, Discrimination

Freuds' psychosexual theory of development posits that gender identity results from adopting gender roles through identification with one's same sex parent. Which of the following is NOT an outgrowth of Freud's theory (from either Freud or other theorists)?

Children sort behaviors into gendered categories, according to the examples they see in their own environments

Why do stereotypes develop?

Cognitively Stereotypes are specific schemas - Cognitive categories - Allow for rapid processing of experiences - Constricive - Influence our own behavior Strengthened by illusory correlations - Erroneous association of two events - Stereotypes prime illusory correlaions - Illusory correlations support stereotypes

Who said "Feminism in its most glorious, transformative, inclusive sense, is not about man-hating..."?

Courtney Martin

Heteronormative

Cultural norms and attitudes that maintain the expectation that all people fall into a binary system of male and female, characterized by corresponding biological sex, gender roles, gender identity, and heterosexual orientation

What are gender stereotypes?

Culturally shared beliefs and expectaions about the traits and behaviors of males and females - Socially assigned, based on sex - Based on essenialist claims of "diference" - Establish and maintain gender norms: set behavioral criteria Same is true for racial, class, ability, sexuality... stereotypes

sexual identity

Describes how someone feels about or relates to their sex, gender(s), and sexual orientation.

When do gender stereotypes develop?

Developmentally - Ages 2-3: Rigid understanding of gender, based on immediate experience - Ages 4-7: Focus on categorizing gender diferences - Stereotyping begins around age 6-7 - Ages 8-10: Children develop complex abstracions about gender traits - Adolescence: Idenity development is a major social and cogniive goal - Young teens over-commit to gender roles, relax later in adolescence

What the second-wave overlooked

Diversity - focus on sexism did not extend to include consideration of intersectionality, and did not address racial & ethnic discrimination, resulting in a predominantly white-women's movement (African-American women, Latina women, Asian women, Muslim women, Native-American women)

Who said "Feminism is a belief that women and men are inherently of equal worth. Because most societies privilege men as a group, social movements are necessary to achieve equality between women and men, with ht understanding that gender always intersects with other social hierarchies"

Estelle Freedman

How is privilege influenced by intersectionality?

Every social category has a dominant group and subordinate group(s) - Gender - Socioeconomic status - Race - Ability - Age - Religion - Sexual orientation - Physical appearance Dominant group holds the privilege (power & opportunity) - Experience of privilege varies as identities intersect - Membership in many dominant groups = more privilege - Membership in fewer dominant groups = less privilege EVERYONE has some degree of privilege

True or False: All men's movements have actively opposed the goals of feminism

False

True or False: Feminist standpoint epistemologies advocate a moderate, cautious approach that utilizes the scientific method to study the gender experiences of all people

False

True or False: It is nearly impossible to discern between scientific and pseudoscientific claims related to gender

False

True or False: Journal editors are most likely to publish articles that find little or no difference between genders

False

True or False: Participation in weekly discussion sections is optional and ungraded

False

True or False: The identities of "true woman" and "real man" were available to people of all races, classes, sexual orientations, and religions

False

True or False: Women of color found support for resisting racial discrimination in the second-wave of feminism

False

Which of the following does NOT demonstrate the power of stereotypes to prime our perceptions?

Felix believes that women are physically weak, and notices a woman at the hardware store lifting 50lb bags of cement into her cart

Which of the following is NOT a stereotype about feminism, as detailed in Threshold Concepts....?

Feminists believe that women and men are inherently equal

During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, psychologists focused heavily on developing tests to measure intelligence and other individual differences. Which of these was NOT a reason for this?

First-wave feminists raised awareness of institutional structures of privilege and oppression, which identified overlapping individual differences in identity as factors that directly dictated a person's elevation or limitation within a culture

According to "Gendered Media", which of the following is a consequence of biased depictions of men and women in the media?

Fostering unrealistic ideals of men as strong, independent, strong, and competent; normalizing violence against women; pathologizing normal human variation in body type; and creating distorted ideas about ideal romantic relationships

Which of the following best summarizes Lorber's critiques of earlier feminist work on gender as an institution, as presented in "The social construction of gender"?

Gender is something we do, rather than something we are; therefore, it is a process

True Womanhood

Home and family sphere Virtues: •Piety •Purity •Submissiveness •Domesicity

Gender at the intersection

How gender intersects within the matrix created by all of one's identity characteristics, resulting in unique experiences in: - How children develop - How we present ourselves to others - How we view our bodies - Our personal relationships - Our education - Our employment - Our healthcare - Every realm of existence...

Which of the following explains why stereotypes develop universally?

Human cognition organizes information into categories, which are then used to draw rapid conclusions about novel cues

Where does gender bias influence education?

In grad school-where messages about individuals' capabilities and belongingness are reflected in the support or challenges they are given; in grade school- where students are encouraged to study and pursue certain fields and stay away from others; at the professional level-where people decide whether or not to pursue a career in academia; and in college-where students choose majors according to messages they receive about how much they "belong" in those fields

How can you appeal a test question that you believe to have been misgraded?

In writing, within seven days of answers being posted.

Gender and Sexual Diversities (GSD)

Inclusive term for all people who identity outside of the heteronormative binary. This term has recently been proposed as a replacement for LGBT, as it more inclusively recognized variations in gender and sexual identities and expressions

sexual orientation

Indicates who one is generally attracted to, emotionally, romantically, and/or sexually.

Which of the following is true about intersectionality, as a theoretical framework?

Intersectionality as a concern of scholarships was the result of critiques, by Black women, of the racist elements of second wave feminism; intersectionality emerged as a focus of scholarship during the late 20th century; intersectionality stands in contrast to a single-axis approach to studying human experiences; intersectionality rejects the assumption that all members of a racial, gender, or class group have essentially the same experience of race, gender, or class

How did social Darwinism explain the passivity of women?

It argues that passivity must be required for women to raise children

Which of the following is NOT true about stereotyped gender norms?

It is always damaging to follow specific gender norms

Who said women are conditioned by men to believe they're prettiest when gentle and weak?

John Stuart Mill

Which of the following is NOT true about depictions of LGBTQ youth in the media depictions, as reported by LGBTQ youth themselves?

LGBTQ youth perceived that the number of racially diverse LGBTQ characters in the media were slowly increasing

First-wave feminism

Late 19th and early 20th century, America and Europe - White, affluent women (focused on suffrage and property rights) - History often overlooks equivalent efforts by women of color and working-class women - Not a strong influence on psychology directly - Emphasis on biological essentialism seen at this time may have been, in part, a reaction to women's growing visibility

Early research on sex and gender

Late 19th century: Europeans and Americans develop an interest in examining intelligence and individual differences - Intelligence tests - Functionalist focus on individual differences Who did these tests find were the smartest? MALES Results consistently supported the prevailing culture - Groups that were not white, male, heterosexual, or affluent were found mentally inferior - Differences used to support an essentialist point of view that all differences are biologically-based

1st Wave Feminism

Late 19th/early 20th century, America and Europe, focused on suffrage and other legal rights, not a strong influence on psychology directly, tensions from those wanting suffrage and slavery abolished

Asian stereotypes (women)

Lotus blossom (passive, sex object, exotic), dragon lady (evil, sexy criminal)

Which of the following is most important to keep in mind when reading research on gender differences?

Many gender differences reflect differences in socialization, rather than biology; gender is not a reliable predictor of very many traits; and our perceptions of gender are influenced by stereotypes that we have internalized

Who said "it is precisely through the process of making a power situation appear as a fact in the nature of things that traditional authority works"?

Maurice Bloch

According the "Masculinity as homophobia" what contributes to men's silence in situations where they are witnessing injustice (e.g. harassment of women, racism)?

Men are silent because they are afraid that other men will emasculate and humiliate them

2nd wave feminism

Mid 20th century, focus on equality in schools, the work place, and society, differing views led to different varieties of feminism, criticism: affluent white woman's movement, excluded women of color, excluded non-heterosexual women

Second-wave feminism

Mid-20th century - White, affluent women (focused on equality in schools, the work place, and society) - Again, overlooked the contributions and needs of women of color and working-class women - Differing views led to different varieties of feminism: Radical feminists, Liberal feminists, Cultural feminists

When was second wave feminism?

Mid-20th century (1960s esp.)

Will doctor's notes be accepted in this course?

No

Which of the following steps of the research process is NOT susceptible to bias?

None of the above, they are all susceptible to bias

Transgender: Transsexuals

People whose gender identity wholly or partially incongruent with the sex assigned at birth. These people may feel they are a different gender than their physical body. Some physically transition to the congruent physical anatomy through sex change surgery and/or hormone treatments, others opt not to undergo this physical transition. Transsexual people may be gay, straight, or bisexual--gender identity does not determine sexual orientation

What is one likely outcome if research is published and later disconfirmed?

People will have lost interest in the topic and not track the disconfirming evidence

sex

Physical attributes that distinguish between male, female, intersex people.

Typical

Preferred term for referring to more statistically common conditions. "Normal" is not preferred, as it indicates that other conditions are "abnormal," even though they are less common

Sexism

Prejudice toward people based on their sex

Freud

Psychoanalytic theory focused on personality development - Awareness of (anatomical) differences - Conflict and attraction - Identification and gender role adoption - Gender identity - Males - Females Very popular at its time Remains influential

Why is psychology a good field within which to study gender?

Psychology provides scientific tools to objectively examine how experiences shapes gender and gender shapes experience

sexuality

Refers to desire and attraction.

Androgyny

Refers to either a combination of both male and female characteristics, or characteristics of neither sex.

gender

Refers to the behaviors, activities, roles, and actions that are socially attributed to boys, girls, men, women, and transgender people in a given society.

Mens' movements

Spawned in response to fem. movements, diverse, unaffiliated, have not independently prompted significant social change, some support feminist goals, seek alt. models of masculinity, support equality in society, some oppose feminism, focus on restoring traditional gender roles and power differences

What do the authors of "Gender, Race, and Media Representation" believe about gender and race essentialism?

That research should focus on more alternative (i.e. social constructionalist) definitions of gender and race; and that essentialism is problematically maintained is "mainstreamed media"

Gender Identity

The awareness and internalized sense of one's self as female, male, both, or neither. Gender is a major portion of an individual's personal identity.

Gender Role

The culturally prescribed behaviors and norms for women or men. These are the culturally accepted rules of how men and women should behave.

During which "wave" of feminism did feminist debates about sexual violence enter the public sphere?

The second wave

Gender

The traits and behaviors that are culturally defined as appropriate for men and women. These are often described with the words feminine, masculine, or androgynous. The world gender implies that the origin of the characteristic described is learned through social/cultural transmission, and not biologically innate

Which era of feminism was the first to actively resist homophobia, racism, and classism?

Third wave

Who is Margaret Sanger?

This woman coined the term birth control and opened first birth control clinic in 1916; founded the American Birth Control League which is now Planned Parenthood

Transgender: Cross-Dressers

Those who wear clothing associated with the other gender. They may identity as male, female, both, or neither, and may identity with any sexual orientation. This is the preferred term, which has replaced "transvestites." People cross-dress for many different reasons, and the term itself does not denote the motive behind the behavior

Who currently (2019) has greater freedom of self-expression, relative to the rigid gender stereotypes of the early 20th century?

Women

Real Manhood

Work place sphere Characteristics: •No "feminine" traits •Successful •Confident •Aggressive •Masculinity was attained and measured by power over others

If you are found to have submitted an assignment with significant similarity to another student's work, what is not possible?

You may be given the opportunity to redo the assignment for full credit.

what is hegemonic feminism according to Chela Sandoval?

a feminism that was "white led, marginalized the activism and world views of women of color, focused mainly on the US, and treated sexism as the ultimate oppression"

Margaret Sanger

a key figure in 1st wave feminism in dispersing birth control

The Bedchel test is:

a method for assessing gender bias in media narratives

Other sex

a more appropriate term than "opposite sex" as there are many similarities between men and women

What do feminist empiricists advocate?

a more moderate, cautious approach -awareness of the possibility or bias at all points in the research process -caution about overconfidence in objectivity

In the context of this course, privilege is:

a set of advantages associated with certain social identities

What type of media tends to have the greatest impact on our lives?

advertisements

Throughout the 20th century Western culture generally accepted that "real manhood" was proven through

aggressive behavior

What is the constructionist argument?

all knowledge is the subjective result of biased work

gender stereotypes do all of the following EXCEPT:

allow for complete, authentic personal expression

Are women allowed to breastfeed in public?

almost every state in the US protects that right

How was Erik Erikson influenced by Freud?

also believed women were incomplete until marriage

Where are the rates of marriage declining sharpest?

among people with lower incomes and levels of education

what is the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)?

an act passed in 1993 that guarantees US employees 12 weeks of UNPAID leave to attend family responsibilities or personal illness -Limitations: 1. only if they've worked a certain number of hours within a year and if they work for an employer with over 50 employees 2. may not protect right to return to exact position just similar one

What is Halperin's definition of queer?

an identity without an essence -it suggests a new form of self-identification for both gender and sexuality at once

categorical sex is based on ______; sex is based on _______

appearance; biological characteristics

Homosocial

area/group where everyone is the same

How do sociobiologists tend to paint women?

as inferior (esp in early days)

sex category

assignment theoretically based on biology, but actually just assumed in society

Why are women in Western countries more likely to feel negatively about the cessation of menstruation?

b/c menopause is stigmatized as "the end of womanhood" in western countries

what is a double blind?

being judged no matter which choice you make -ex: poor mothers are bad mothers for not being stay-at-home moms but also bad mothers if they don't provide for their kids by working

what is privilege?

benefits, advantages, and power that accrue to members of a dominant group as a result of the oppression of a marginalized group; individual groups may be __________d without realizing, recognizing, even wanting it -for every type of oppression, a corresponding set of _________s exists

Jason thinks of himself as a "good guy"- he holds doors open for women, addresses women as "beautiful" or "gorgeous", and is eager to explain "complex" concepts to women. Bill is distrustful of women, believing that all women secretly hate men and want to strip them of their rights and power. He has a history of abusing girlfriends, refers to women as "bitches", and spends his time and energy fighting the advancement of women in politics and the workplace. Jason is demonstrating ________; Bill is demonstrating _______

benevolent sexism, hostile sexism

source of bias in psychological research

bias comes from the dominant group conducting the research

Essentialist view

biology leads to gender

What research "began" sex difference research?

brain research ("women have smaller heads"); they checked every part of the brain in desperate attempts

cultural feminists

bringing about social change that would value feminine traits and qualities the same as male traits and qualities

What is pseudopsychology?

claims presented without scientific evidence -plays on emotions -focused on satisfying wants (basic human desires) -reflects popular beliefs and values -offers SIMPLE explanations (real science is messy) -not based on credible scientific ecidence -gender is a common topic among this

What is the Feminine Mystique?

concept introduced by Betty Friedan in her 1963 book, arguing that domestic responsibilities alone were unfulfilling to middle-class, educated women

media rep of gay men

confirms the masculinity of the real male, effeminate and nonthreatening

hot lesbian

conventionally attractive women performing as lesbians, written to the heterosexual script, used to add edginess or diversity

Dr. Saphia's most recent study examined how strength of gender identities relates to endorsement of stereotyped gender norms. She found that among men, those who identified as most strongly masculine reported the highest endorsement of stereotyped gender norms. Among women, there was low endorsement of stereotyped gender norms, regardless of strength of feminine identification. This was a ________ study

correlation

What does gender do as a process?

creates social differences that define "woman" and "man"

Which group focused on raising the value of traits and behaviors typically thought of as feminine?

cultural feminists

Which of the following best summarizes the qualitative study on LGBTQ media representation ("Perspectives of LGBTQ emerging adults...")?

current media does not adequately capture the complexity of youth LGBTQ identities

Media rep. of Asian men

dangerous, elusive, foreign, corrupt, economically dangerous, inept, desexualized, not a sexual threat to white men, nerds

research methodologies :Qualitative methods

descriptions of experiences and phenomena are based on observations and interactions with the subjects

Quantitative methods: experimental research

determines causations by manipulating variables and measuring effects

According to Judith Lorber, "gendering" is a process that includes all of the following, EXCEPT:

developing an understanding of genders as a spectrum rather than a binary division

what is an essentialist view?

differences and abilities are inborn -masculinity and femininity are biological

What did the second wave of feminism overlook?

diversity

What does the concept of "separate spheres" justify?

dividing men and women's work on the basis of their differing biology

What is hostile sexism?

dominance-oriented paternalism (negative towards women)

hostile sexism

dominance-oriented paternalism, neg. attitudes towards women, abusing women, dismissing women

What should you do if you need help with an assignment?

email your TA with ample time before it's due

Constructionist view

environment leads to gender

What does a liberal feminist believe in?

equal rights for women and an egalitarian society for women

Liberal feminists

equal rights for women, egalitarian society free of sex discrimination

what were the goals of second wave feminism?

equality in schools, the work place, and society (focused on post-WWII issues)

What was the UN Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW)?

essentially an International bill of rights for women in 1979 that was NOT ratified by US

Where does bias occur?

every step of research

Queer theory

examines how gender and sexuality are socially constructed experiences that give privilege to some groups while withholding it from others

What was the late 19th Century's (Victorian Era) focus for research on sex and gender?

examining intelligence and individual differences -functionalist view on individual differences -differences used to support essentialist pov

Super mom

excellent in bedroom/office as wife/mother/friend, compelling character on a sitcom, close to a lot of cultural norms and expectations, made to seem like reality, not realistic w/out great personal cost

Privilege

exists for those in dominant positions, but ppl in positions of privilege are encouraged not to talk about it

Gender stereotypes

expectations about a person's biological and psychological features, based on beliefs about his or her apparent sex

Dr. Dunn's research on sex development has found that exposure to high levels of testosterone causes masculinization of the genitalia. This must be a ________ research

experimental

What leads to men's silence about minority oppression and subtle harassment?

fear of humiliation and being ashamed to be afraid

What is a functionalist view?

focus on nature, not nurture -Darwinism

Sandra Bem

focused on bias within psychology, exposing the male centered bias in previous psychology, affluent white male experience was seen as normal experience

What does a cultural feminist believe in?

focused on bringing by social change that made feminine qualities equal with masculine qualities (value them equally)

What does a radical feminist believe in?

focused on ways in which women, other races, and other minorities are oppressed by white males -"Smash the patriarchy" -used rhetorics and actions that could be seen as divisive (conservatives painted them as the "man-hating feminists")

If a study finds correlation, how can we assume causation?

follow up with an experiment

What is the central social identity?

gender identity

Gender incongruence (gender dysphoria)

gender identity that is not congruent with physical sex, resulting in significant social and or psychological distress. Although this has been historically referred to as gender identity disorder, the person's gender identity is often quite certain, and it is the sexual anatomy that is the source of distress.

Which of the following is true and gender?

gender is defined by a culture as a set of traits and behaviors expected from people with either female or male sex characteristics; and gender is a self-identified part of one's own identity

What did Margaret Mead study?

gender roles in tribes in Samoa/New Guinea

How does male privilege impact mansplaining?

gives the assumption of the right to speak, that one is knowing and has something to say worth listening to, and that one's words will be listened to

passing

groups assimilating, either as identification with an oppressor and/or as a survival tactic

What is the Pocahontas paradox?

historical movement that persist in romanticizing and vilifying Native women

gender stereotypes (historical roots): Cult of True Woman Hood

home and family sphere (and church), virtues: piety, purity, submissiveness, domesticity

What form of enactment is masculinity?

homosocial

individuals policing and criticizing the behaviors of others in their own subordinate identity, according to the standards of those in the dominant identity is a demonstration (most specifically) of:

horizontal hostility

Latina stereotypes (women)

hot and spicy spitfire, overly emotional and anxious, exotic suductress

One guideline for critical thinking is to evaluate assumptions. This means:

identifying and assessing the assumptions that the source is making about the audience, the claims it is presenting, and the evidence for those claims; and identifying and addressing the assumptions that you (the audience) are making about the source, it's veracity, and the claims being made

what does the intersectional approach require us to consider?

identity categories as overlapping

what does Mary Wollstonecraft's "A Vindication of the Rights of a Woman" argue?

if women has equal access to education it would lead to a better social order

Qualitative methods: case study

in-depth descriptions of one subject group

Qualitative methods: ethnography

in-depth illustrations of unique experiences

What do the authors of "Gendered media" propose as a solution to biased media that supports violence against women?

including more diverse images of both women and men

What played a major role in the eugenics movement?

intelligence tests

Intersectionality

interactive matrix of multiple aspects of one's social identities, creates a unique identity with lived experience, produces a unique individual with unique perspectives

guidelines for critical thinking

interpret studies and results carefully

Who do "Sex difference" researchers not take into account?

intersex people

Marked and unmarked language such as "women novelists" vs. "novelists", "women doctors" vs. "doctors", and "women's deodorant" vs. "deodorant" demonstrates how ________ is an indicator of privilege

invisibility

what is incel culture?

involuntarily celibate (don't have sexual partner but want one aka EXPECT one)

the "bootstraps myth" is the idea that:

it is possible and likely that people will move up in socioeconomic status through sheer will and personal effort

What will happen if you email one of the teaching staff with a question that is answered in the syllabus?

it will not be answered

According to Maurice Bloch, traditional authority works by making power structures appear to be:

just a fact of nature

When was first wave feminism?

late 19th and early 20th century

What is an effect size?

magnitude of sex difference -tiny avg size: 1 point on a 100 point test -large avg size: 15 points (still very small)

Intersectionality

major perspective within gender studies that considers these multiple aspects of a person's identity and how they interact to create a unique identity and experience

What did Western monotheistic religions born in the Middle East encourage?

male leadership and dominance while dehumanizing women and placing a horrible taboo on their sexuality

Born Sex Role Inventory (BSRI)

measures masculinity and femininity independently of each other. One can be both very masculine and feminine, which is a sign of stronger mental resilience

Cultivation theory states that:

media shapes what a culture thinks of as "normal"

What is horizontal hostility?

members of marginalized groups police each other's behavior and/or appearance with the values of the dominant group -ex: "respectability politics" (racial) -ex: slut shaming

what is the "declaration of Sentiments" (1848)?

modeled on US DOI, included 1st format demand for access to the "elective franchise", or voting rights, for women

What is a heterosocial situation?

more variety of people (tend to be more guarded and follow social norms)

Jezebel

most common rep. of black women: hyper sexual, promiscuous, originated as way to blame female slaves for rape, sexualized fantasy objects, perpetuates misogyny

will the final exam be given early?

no

Did first wave feminism influence psychology?

not a strong influence on psych directly

What is misandry?

notion that men are now undervalued in our society -hatred of men

Where can you find your grades throughout the quarter?

on canvas

Intersex (Disorder of sexual development)

one of many conditions resulting in chromosomes, gonads, genitals, and or hormone patterns that do not match the typical appearance, function and or combo associated with either male or female. intersex person may have some female and some anatomical physiological characteristics and may be assigned as male or female at birth

What is gender as a social institution?

one of the major ways that humans organize their lives

What is categorical sex?

one's assumed sex based on physical traits (what's on the outside)

how many makeup exams can one student take?

only one midterm may be made up

Qualitative methods: interview

open-ended questions and discussion with an individual

A set of privileges afforded a dominant group is directly tied to:

oppression of the corresponding subordinate group

How is gender created?

people create gender through their social lives

People is a dominant social identity are most likely to act to restrict the power of others when they (those with the dominant social identity):

perceive a challenge to their own power

what is bigotry?

personal belief system that may manifest in acts of meanness or hostility on an individual level

What is the composition of stereotypes?

physical appearance influences assumptions about traits, behaviors, and occupations

What is the Critical Race Theory (CRT)?

places race at the center of critical analysis and it's central premise is that racism is an ordinary fact of life

Rhoda Unger

pointed out the differences between gender and sex, set the precedent for when sex and gender should be used/how they should be used/what they meant

Native american woman stereotypes

portrayed as strong, magical, seductive, destructive, exotic

Transwomen in media

portrayed in "lipstick and heels," overwrought drag-queens and dead prostitutes, "deceptive transwoman," deceiving straight man into sexual encounter

What is manhood equated with?

power (over women and over other man)

Hegemony

power over others by a particular group

what is prejudice?

preconception about an individual (on basis of racial identity)

How does Threshold Concepts define oppression?

prejudice and discrimination directed toward a group and perpetuated by the ideologies and practices of multiple social institutions -can take cultural and symbolic forms, such as beauty and success, and material forms, such as structured forms of failure that disproportionately impact some groups more than others

oppression

prejudice and discrimination, both individually and institutionally

What does Title IX do?

prohibits discrimination in education, including athletic programs

What is benevolent sexism?

protective paternalism -women are precious and must be protected -women idealized but treated as objects (ex: pageant culture)

benevolent sexism

protective paternalism, "positive" attitudes that diminish women, women are idealized but treated like objects, ownership of a girlfriend, seeing women as needing protection or help

What is the macho man portrayal in media?

proves manliness by degrading women

What are "teach-ins"?

public participatory forum on an issue geared toward taking action (popularized during Vietnam War)

What is "doxxing"?

publicly posting the home addresses and contact info of individuals as a way of making them vulnerable -ex: video game critique Anita Sarkeesia

Dr. Chance, a clinical social worker, has noticed a trend among her clients toward greater use of unprovoked violence. She is very interested in this and wondering what the larger story might be, and would like to develop an in-depth description of the environmental conditions and acute events associated with violent behaviors in her client population. As a starting point, Dr. Chance is likely to start by using ______ to develop an in-depth illustration of the situation

qualitative methods

Qualitative methods: focus group

questions for, and discussion within, a group

The characterizations of all feminists as "man-hating, bra-burning, hairy lesbians" arose in response to the specific goals of

radical feminists

Carol Gilligan

raised feminine values as perspectives that should be noted, think about masculine and feminine traits in an egalitarian society, morality of females

Naomi Weisstein

raising awareness of bias sexism in research about women, excluded consideration of environmental effects, how women are shaped by culture

What does gender do as part of a stratification system?

ranks men above women of the same race and class (men's actions are valued more highly)

media rep. of white men

real man, some characteristics of the victorian real man

The first wave of feminism did NOT:

reflect the needs or working-class women

what is symbolic annihilation according to Tuchman and colleagues?

relative absence of marginalized groups in mass media which has the effect of signaling to the public that these groups are less important and beneath notice

research methodologies: quantitative methods

rely on data to draw generalizable conclusions

Uncle Tom

rep. of black man: Subservient, out to please white people, happy to help, allows himself to be exploited by white people, presents no threat to white man

Sambo

rep. of black man: childlike, irresponsible, simpleton, black men are lazy, presents black men as powerless, discredits their capability, incapability of positions of power

Animalistic Savage

rep. of black man: violent and sexually aggressive, sexual threat to white women b/c of this a threat to the white race, black men are criminals, constant threat, to be feared,

Mammy

rep. of black woman: passive nurturing, non-sexual, non-threatening, care-giver role

Saphire

rep. of black woman: strong, dominant, aggressive, matriarch, used to blame black women for inner city poverty,

What do feminists standpoint epistemologies advocate?

research focused entirely on women -also biased -doesn't advance understanding of gender

What is the scientific method?

research method involving the definition of a problem and the drafting and empirical testing of the hypotheses by gather data -must be reproducible

Vengeful woman

set on emasculating a man, centers men as victims of women with power, don't let women have power b/c they will take away yours, women w power are crazy/unstable/dangerous

What could be the cause average men being lager than females?

sexual selection

2nd wave feminist influence on psych

shifted focus from cataloging gender-related differences to a new interest in understanding women and gender, in social context, reformation of scientific practices

What do moral conservatives believe separate spheres create?

social order -keeps men's otherwise brutish nature in check and ensures women and children are provided for through institutions of marriage, church, family, and community

what causes some people to attempt to silence those who acknowledge social disparities?

social power + discomfort

matrix of domination

social structure as having multiple, interlocking levels of domination that stem from the societal configuration of race, class, and gender relations--in opposition to difference, diversity, and multicultural perspectives

The goal of being culturally identified as a "true woman" ensured that women were:

submissive

What were the goals of first wave feminism?

suffrage and property rights

Which course policy best summarizes how to succeed in this course?

take responsibility for yourself

Uploading an empty document for a homework assignment will result in:

that empty document being graded as-is, resulting in zero points for the assignment

What is Butler well known for saying?

that the sex/gender system invents the very concept of heterosexuality (and its assumed naturalness) through repetition of gender identity norms

Feminism

the belief that women and men are inherently equal

Which of the following factors in Western society did NOT contribute to the emergence of social division between the sexes, according to Garbacik?

the establishment of private property

As detailed in the assigned reading, rejecting the idea that society is structured into systems of oppression and privilege by arguing that "not all [dominant group] people oppress [subordinate group] people" reflects

the impulse to "individualize and personalize processes that are social and structural"

What is the beauty myth?

the notion that beauty is objective and unchanging, when historically there are continued changes in cultural standards about what constitutes beauty, as well as variation from culture to culture

What was a declaration of second wave feminism?

the personal is political

what is whitesplaining?

the phenomenon of white people explains to POC how they should feel about issues of race and racism, and offering their unsolicited judgement about whether those experiences could. be considered legitimate examples of racism

A feminist perspective (or stance) is a way of considering knowledge that examines

the power relations that structure what is presented as fact

Students first learning about intersectionality can typically understand that one woman (or man's) gender experience is not the same as another woman (or man's) gender experience due to the influence of other identity categories. However, many get stuck wondering why it matters that everyone has different overlapping identities and experiences. Feminist scholarship emphasizes that taking an intersectional perspective is what allows us to comprehend and effectively approach:

the structure and function of systems of privilege and oppression

What is doxa?

the stuff that "everyone knows" -stuff that people think/assume without evidence

Fragility refers to:

the tendency toward experiencing a negative emotional response when asked to recognize the experiences and validity of those with subordinate ideas

How does a sex category become a gender status?

through naming, dress, and the use of other gender markers

Why is it important that a source define the terms it is using?

to avoid alienating non-experts who are unfamiliar with the jargon of a particular field; and the provide clear, accessible information for anyone who might be interested in that topic

What is the goal of psychological research?

to explain and describe mental and behavioral phenomena

What does it mean to "queer one's gender or a space or a topic"?

to make it more inclusive or merged, and less singular or homogenous

What do conservative sociobiologists believe?

traits seen in humans now are ones that helped their survival

Sexism: Sex discrimination

treating people differently based on their sex

Gender schema theory

tries to detect patterns of how gender stereotypes vary across space and time

True or false: If an assignment is due at 5:00pm, and you turn it in at 5:01pm, it is late.

true

Critical thinking requires all of the following, EXCEPT:

trust in authority

Sexual orientation

type of partner a person is sexually attracted to, usually in relation to one's own sex or gender identity. Those who are attracted to other-sex partners are heterosexual, those attracted to same sex-partners are homosexual, those attracted to both are bisexual, those attracted to no one are asexual

Strict adherence to all gender norms that are used to narrowly define masculinity or femininity:

upholds the cultural power of those stereotypes, maintains gender binary divisions, limits individual expression, and fails to challenge sexist assumptions

What is the single most evident marker of manhood?

violence -willingness/desire to fight

What is meta-analysis?

way to use statistical methods to analyze the combined results of a large number of studies of a particular subject

radical feminists

ways in which minorities have been oppressed by white male dominance, end of white male dominance would come from gender equality, break down the patriarchy, in terms of all minorities, destroy the structures that support rich-white-straight-male, shifting society, targeted by conservative groups (stemmed notion of man-hating feminists)

Psychoanalytic theory

when children become aware of biological differences between sexes this leads to deep conflict, develop a deep sex attraction to our opposite sexual appearance

What is crowdsourcing?

when social media platforms allow multiple users to contribute to the building of a text, database, or website (Ex: Wikipedia)

what is a homosocial situation?

where all the people are very similar (more similarities than palpable differences)

How did Freud influence Cohen?

with his theory of hyper-masculinity: hyper masculine to prove masculinity when a man is insecure about their masculinity

When did the body become a "solid" foundation for understanding differences between men and women?

with the invention of the two-sex model of anatomy

How did Freud influence Parsons?

with the male aggression theory: must reject norms and all feminine things to be manly

If you will require accommodations for religious observance, when must you request these accommodations?

within the first two weeks of the class

Female chauvinist pig

woman asserts her "power" by presenting herself as a highly sexual and objectifying of other women, using other women in quest for power, being sexy and sexist against other women is powerful

How did Gerda Lerner explain the prizing of chastity in women?

women "sold" to husbands (with dowry) b/c they produced offspring

What is Harvard Business Review's mommy track?

women who want to have children cost businesses too much money and should be put on a separate track, in which they don't get the opportunities for advancement that go to men and women who are career-oriented

gender stereotypes (historical roots): Real Manhood

work place sphere, characteristics: no "feminine" traits, successful, confident, aggressive

how is tone policing done?

works by derailing a discussion by critiquing the emotionality of the message rather than the message itself -silent tactic used by those holding privilege to prevent minorities from sharing experiences of oppression

Desiring Midriff

young, highly sexual, white, thin

When and why did modern gender stereotypes originate?

•Late 1800s/Early 1900s (Victorian/Edwardian era) - dramatic social/economic change!•Industrial revolution •Reconstruction - the Great Migration •Immigration •Sufrage •Education •Growing visibility of various subcultures •Threats to wealthy, white, male hegemony resulted in the division of the "two spheres" by those with political/religious/scienitic power


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