Dr. Sara DiazWGST 303: The *isms: Race, Class, and GenderGonzaga University
Introduction
WGS 101: A CRASH COURSE
Central Concepts
• Social Construction (vs Essentialism)•Gender•Race•Class• Sexuality•Privilege• Intersectionality
Social Construction Theory
• Differences between people are the result of complex socialization processes rather than inherent, biological or “essential” differences.• Essentialism – the idea that differences between
people can be reduced to some essential (unchangeable and inherent) difference (often biological, sometimes religious).
Examples of Biological Determinism
• Women are nurturing because they bear children, therefore they should stay home and raise children.• Women are more emotional than men and
therefore not well suited for jobs that need rational decision making. • EG President, example of premenstrual syndrome
• Men are better at math and science and therefore should go into fields like engineering, architecture, physics.
WGS 101: Sex vs Gender• In WGST we do not use “gender” and “sex” interchangeably.
• “Sex,” sometimes called “assigned sex,” is the biological category we assign people do based on perceived differences between anatomy (specifically genitalia). Eg. male, female.
• “Gender” is the process of socializing males to be “men” and females to “women.”• Gender is not something we achieve.• It is something we actively do or perform in order to conform to
social norms, expectations, and roles.
WGS 101: Sex vs Gender
Binary Sex/Gender SystemSex Category Male FemaleGender Man/Boy Woman/GirlGender Expression Masculine Feminine
WGS 101: Definition of Gender
Gender is a social construction that establishes our definitions of self, our relations with others, and
our life chances...Moreover, is not just an individual attribute. Instead, it is part of the social structure of society and thus has an institutional
component...
--Margaret Anderson, Thinking about Women, p. 30
Power Dynamics
• Power differentials between “Men” and “Women” had to be justified during the Enlightenment period when the first discourse about “equality” of human kind emerged.
• One way this was achieved was to “naturalize” the social differences between “Men” and “Women.”
WGS 101: Hierarchical BinariesMan
WomanHuman
AnimalParent
ChildWhite
BlackRich
Poor
Heterosexual
HomosexualWestern
EasternAble
DisabledChristian
MuslimCisgender
Transgender
Impact of Gender
• There are different rules for the behavior of males and female in all aspects of our lives.• Because we live in a society that places
higher value on men (among other social categories) these rules result in differential access to power and resources.
Privilege
The social positioning of one group over another group that leads to unearned,
systematic advantage for those who are privileged and unwarranted systematic
disadvantage for those who are subordinate.
Intersectionality
• We all occupy multiple social locations.• Our identities cannot be reduced to a single
location (only female, only heterosexual, only black, etc)• We all occupy a mix of privileged and subjugated
position (though the mixes are different).• Oppressions based on socially defined identities
do not simply “add.” (a black woman is not simply twice as oppressed as a white woman).
Intersectionality
• Instead oppressions are interlocking, intersectional or mutually reinforcing.• Sexism is reinforced by racism. Classism is reinforced by
heterosexism. Etc. All the “isms” work together to create a system of domination.• That system of domination creates a hierarchy of
privilege. • Not all privileges and oppressions are equivalent to
each other.• Because the system of domination uses interlocking
oppressions, we cannot work towards liberation along a single line of oppression.
Seminar Guidelines• Break into six groups. • Each group will take a do and don’t from the list. • Discuss your do and don’t and decide what you think it is all
about.• Assign someone to report back to the class.