enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Gender role - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_role

    According to Professor Lei Chang, gender attitudes within the domains of work and domestic roles, can be measured using a cross-cultural gender role attitudes test. Psychological processes of the East have historically been analysed using Western models (or instruments ) that have been translated, which potentially, is a more far-reaching ...

  3. Social construction of gender - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_construction_of_gender

    Gender roles are socially constructed and vary across cultures and contexts, with empirical studies indicating more similarities than differences between genders. Judith Butler 's distinction between gender performativity and gender roles underscores the performative aspect of gender, influenced by societal norms and individual expression.

  4. Sociology of gender - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sociology_of_gender

    However, the media is a product of different cultural values. Western culture creates cultural gender roles based on the meanings of gender and cultural practices. Western culture has clear distinctions among sex and gender, where sex is the biological differences and gender is the social construction.

  5. Gender - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender

    Many cultures have different systems of norms and beliefs based on gender, but there is no universal standard to a masculine or feminine role across all cultures. [56] Social roles of men and women in relation to each other is based on the cultural norms of that society, which lead to the creation of gender systems. The gender system is the ...

  6. Gender system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_system

    Gender systems are the social structures that establish the number of genders and their associated gender roles in every society. A gender role is "everything that a person says and does to indicate to others or to the self the degree that one is either male, female, or androgynous. This includes but is not limited to sexual and erotic arousal ...

  7. Gender essentialism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_essentialism

    Gender essentialism is a theory which attributes distinct, intrinsic qualities to women and men. [1] [2] Based in essentialism, it holds that there are certain universal, innate, biologically (or psychologically) based features of gender that are at the root of many of the group differences observed in the behavior of men and women.

  8. Gender inequality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_inequality

    Existing research on the topic of gender/sex and politics has found differences in political affiliation, beliefs, and voting behavior between men and women, although these differences vary across cultures. Gender is omnipresent in every culture, and while there are many factors to consider when labeling people "Democrat" or "Republican"—such ...

  9. Sex–gender distinction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sex–gender_distinction

    In the Oxford English Dictionary, gender is defined as—in a modern and especially feminist use—"a euphemism for the sex of a human being, often intended to emphasize the social and cultural, as opposed to the biological, distinctions between the sexes", with the earliest example cited being from 1963. [55]