Friday, March 22, 2019

Doing Gender

From Soc Images,  Male Models Display Clothes; Female Models Display Themselves,

From Instagram Brosbeingbasic

From Bored Panda,   Man Or Woman? Androgynous Model Poses As Both To Challenge Gender Stereotypes

Also from Bored Panda, When Guys Try To Parody Women Photos And The Result Beats The Original


Men-Ups, Men Posing like Classic Female Pin-Up Models

 


What if male Avengers posed like the female one?














If Fashion Ads Posed Men Like Women

Cross-cultural Evidence of Gender as Social Construct

Our class (and sociology in general) is usually focused on the ways that men and women are treated differently and the implications of that different treatment.  Sometimes, students think that gender differences are simply an innate part of our nature (DNA, biology).  However, a cross-cultural look at gender reveals how widely these cultural norms vary.  It is our culture (or cultures) that surround us with these ideas and norms so they color how we see the world.  This makes it difficult to see the social construction of gender.

In Are men natural born criminals? The prison numbers don't lie (2015), Telegraph reporter Jessica Abrahams explores the academic theories that account for the social construction of higher criminality among males.  Among her claims are:

  • The vast majority of crimes are nonviolent and men commit those too, so it is not simply that men's biology makes them more violent.
  • Women may commit as many crimes as men, but they are better at not being held accountable and males may be deferential to holding women accountable.
  • Women hold fewer positions in which they can commit crime and males feel pressure to succeed which motivates them to commit crime.
  • Hypermasculinity may be the key to breaking the cycle of male crime.


Even with the generalizations about gender and crime, there are still wide variations in gender norms among cultures.  This provides evidence that gender is not built-in biologically.
 Here are some cross-cultural studies that demonstrate how gender can vary:

From the World Economic Forum (2017), the Global Gender Gap Report:
https://www.undispatch.com/heres-every-country-world-ranks-gender-equality/

And here is a pdf of the 2017 Global Gender Gap Index.

Here are 6 cultures that still exist today which are matriarchal.

And here are some ways that matriarchal cultures exhibit different norms:
Marriage
Marriage in matriarchal societies are typically non-binding, and various types of romantic relationships are embraced. 
In the mostly matrilocal tribe of Khasi in India, because children live with the mother's family side of the family or clan, there is little to no stigma and hardship when women divorce and have to move. "No matter how many times the woman marries, her children will always remain with her," editor of The Shillong Times and a Khasi, Patricia Mukhim, told Dame magazine. "And even if a man abandons a woman he has impregnated, the children are never 'illegitimate.' "
Crime
In mainstream society, men overwhelmingly commit more crimes — and more serious ones at that — than women. Jennifer Schwartz of Washington State University's Department of Sociology told Dame magazine:  "In more gender-egalitarian societies, there is much less crime by both women and men. And in those societies, the crime gap between women and men is somewhat larger, that is, women participate even less in crime."
Sex
Generally, people who live in matriarchal societies have much more sex and face much less stigma. In the Mosuo tribe, for example, men and women can take as many sexual partners as they pleaseand bearing children with different people is accepted. 

Domestic Violence
Domestic abuse is an epidemic in mainstream society; an estimated 3-4 million women are battered each year in the U.S. alone. On the opposite end of the spectrum, there are indications that domestic violence is close to absent in matrilineal societies.

Here is a 2004 book by anthropologist Peggy Reeves Sanday, professor at University of Pennsylvania:
Contrary to the declarations of some anthropologists, matriarchies do exist. Peggy Reeves Sanday first went to West Sumatra in 1981, intrigued by reports that the matrilineal Minangkabau—one of the largest ethnic groups in Indonesia—label their society a matriarchy. Numbering some four million in West Sumatra, the Minangkabau are known in Indonesia for their literary flair, business acumen, and egalitarian, democratic relationships between men and women.

Monday, March 18, 2019

Continuing on...

First, for today, please be mindful of yourselves.  There is plenty of research about how to take care of yourself.
Allow yourself to experience a range of emotion.  This can be difficult especially for males. It is okay to experience different emotions. 
Talk to someone about your feelings. There are people here at school who are willing and want to help you.  Seek them out.  Maybe a social worker, teacher, or a friend.   
Get out into nature.  There are myriad benefits to spending time in nature.  If you live near a nature preserve, take a hike, get some fresh air.  If not, simply a walk in your neighborhood being mindful of nature can be restorative. 
Exercise.  There are many forms of exercise.  Choose something that is pleasurable to you.  Maybe it is a sport, but it also might be weight lifting or simply hiking/walking. 
Lastly, know that you matter.  Just like there is no telling how far the bell resonates, there is no telling how far your influence goes.  
HW:  Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's essay, We Should All Be Feminists.  Also if you want to print it, a cleaner copy is here.

Today:  We are continuing on with the video called Killing Us Softly 4.  (Click here to watch it on mediacast).

Friday, March 15, 2019

Elite College Acceptance and Social Class

From the NY Times Upshot
How Much Does Getting Into an Elite College Actually Matter?
Certain kinds of students — but not the privileged and the wealthy — benefit greatly from a selective university.

By Kevin Carey
March 15, 2019

Was it worth it?

The celebrities and C.E.O.s arrested in this week’s college bribery scandal were charged with paying up to $1.2 million for guaranteed admission to elite universities. And of course there’s a much larger and mostly legal system whereby rich people pull strings, hire consultants and make enormous tax-deductible donations, all in the hopes of improving their children’s college chances.

Yet academic research suggests that these efforts are mostly a waste of money, and that the seized opportunities would have actually helped other students much more.

In 2014, the economists Stacy Dale and Alan Krueger published an analysis of the benefits of attending a highly selective college. They found that, after statistically controlling for students’ SAT scores, economic background and college ambitions, the long-term financial returns are “generally indistinguishable from zero.” Students who are poised to succeed tend to do so even if they don’t get into the Ivy League.

But there was a crucial exception. There were strong benefits for the subset of black and Hispanic students, and for those whose parents had few educational credentials. It turns out that students who come from less privileged backgrounds benefit greatly from selective colleges. Elite higher education gives them social capital they didn’t already have.

In other words, Lori Loughlin’s daughter Olivia Jade Giannulli, who is attending the University of Southern California, would have probably been fine attending Arizona State University. (Arizona State is a thriving public research university that Ms. Giannulli’s father is reported to have cited on F.B.I. wiretaps as the unthinkable destination he would pay bribes to avoid.) When you’re a 19-year-old YouTube star who spends spring break on a billionaire’s yacht, life tends to work out.


But if the charges against them are proved, Ms. Giannulli’s parents would have taken something their daughter didn’t need from someone for whom it might have been life-changing.

There are some important caveats to Ms. Dale and Mr. Krueger’s research. This kind of analysis isn’t devised to detect certain narrow pathways to elite professions that run through a handful of top colleges. Supreme Court clerks, for instance, tend to hail from a small number of highly selective universities. There is still a pipeline to Wall Street and management consulting that traverses a long-established network of private high schools feeding into top colleges.

But if you’re the kind of student who needs to pay someone to take the SAT for you or to photoshop your face onto the body of a varsity water polo player, you’re probably not Supreme Court material.

At the same time, research from the Equality of Opportunity Project found that while many kinds of colleges can help students move to the top 20 percent of the income distribution from the bottom 20 percent, moving to the top 1 percent from the bottom 20 percent almost always requires a highly selective institution. If you’re at all concerned about economic mobility, this underscores the waste of unfairly displacing qualified low-income students from top colleges and universities.

Selectivity may also matter more in other parts of the higher education universe. A 2009 study from the economist Mark Hoekstra found that white men who attended a flagship public research university earned 20 percent more over time than similar white male students who attended less selective colleges.

Not all students at selective colleges have the same experience. Soon-to-be-released research from the economists Douglas Webber, Ben Ost and Weixiang Pan found that students who majored in high-demand fields such as engineering at less selective public universities earned more than similar students who chose other majors at more selective universities.

The economists Sarah Cohodes and Joshua Goodman found that students who accepted a scholarship to attend a public university with lower graduation rates than alternatives were themselves less likely to graduate.

In general, there are strong correlations between the resources colleges have and the success of students who attend them. So it seems nothing about the admissions scandal should dissuade parents and students from trying to find a good college to attend.

More than anything, the scandal shows how much elite higher education has become entangled in structures of prestige, status and anxiety among the upper class. It is in some ways a case of one-percenters lusting after the privileges of one-tenth-of-one-percenters — possibly risking infamy and prison to buy something that, the evidence suggests, provides little value for their privileged offspring.

Monday, March 11, 2019

HW:  Please ready to discuss the Mahler reading for tomorrow.  We will discuss it, then apply it, then there will be an assessment on it later this unit.


Today's schedule:

Progress Reports

Finish watching Tough Guise.

Discuss She Kills Monsters

Theater guide from Stage Agent

Questions for sociology:

What are reasons Tilly did not come out to her sister Agnes?

How was Tilly socialized by agents of socialization?  Which agents and how?

How is D&D a subculture?

Violent masculinity and how play flips masculinity?

What kind of identity did Tilly give the characters in the play?  Why?  In what ways did they meet the traditional gender norms?  In what ways did they depart from them?

 Mahler's Adolescent Homophobia and Random School Shootings...

Tuesday, March 5, 2019

Data for Cross-cultural Research: NationMaster and Our World in Data

NationMaster

Compare Countries on Just about Anything!
NationMaster is where stats come alive! We are a massive central data source and a handy way to graphically compare nations.
NationMaster is a vast compilation of data from hundreds of sources. Using the forms below, you can get maps and graphs on all kinds of statistics with ease.
We want to be the web’s one-stop resource for country statistics on everything from obesity to murders.

https://www.nationmaster.com/


Our World in Data

Our World in Data is focussing on the powerful changes that reshape our world.To work towards a better future, we all need to understand how and why the world has changed up to now. We must carefully measure what we care about, and let the facts and research inform our worldview.We cannot know what is happening in the world from the daily news alone. The news media focuses on single events, too often missing the long-lasting, forceful changes that reshape the world we live in.Our World in Data is a non-profit website that brings together the data and research on the powerful, long-run trends reshaping our world: Through interactive data visualizations we show how the world has changed; by summarizing the scientific literature we explain why.

Gender data

Inquiry-based learning seeks to empower students to ask questions and research the answers.  It pursues critical thinking in meaningful ways. 

The inquiry question is:

How do we know that males and females are not simply different because of biology and evolution?  Are males simply wired to be more aggressive and dominant and violent?


Here are some sources to get you started:

https://ourworldindata.org/homicides

https://contexts.org/blog/quicklit-6-recent-sociological-findings-on-domestic-violence/

https://www.everydaysociologyblog.com/2016/08/bullying-and-doing-gender.html

https://www.thejournal.ie/readme/violence-against-women-1959171-Feb2015/
Neither gender is innately predisposed to violence – social environment is key
The evidence so far available suggests two important conclusions.
First, there is no conclusive evidence that men and women differ in their innate biological or psychological propensity for violence. The fact that men commit the majority of violent acts may instead be understood as arising mainly from the social environment.
Second, the fact that explanations of persistent violent behaviour are to be found to varying degrees in brain damage, psychological abnormality, childhood trauma, group peer pressure, and adverse social environments allows us to go one step further and conclude that persistent violent behaviour is an abnormality that emerges under certain circumstances.
Under the patriarchal circumstances that currently prevail world-wide, this abnormality emerges in men to a much greater degree than in women.


https://www.nationmaster.com/country-info/stats/Crime/Murders/Per-capita





Monday, March 4, 2019

Gender Lab and the Gender Binary

Toys:
  -differences in toys; boys=action figures, weapons;  girls=jewelry, dolls
         
And see this post about other products that are pointlessly gendered thus reifying the idea of traditional gender traits.  And this is 5 reasons why these products are not just funny, but they have important role in inequality in society.

Gendered Halloween costumes.

And, this post about Barbie shows how the doll creates unrealistic expectations for the female body.



And here is Ellen making fun of Bic pens for women.





Qualitative Study of Professor Reviews
Here is a qualitative study
 of sex and the words used to describe professors on ratemyprofessor.com.