The Gendered SocietyOxford University Press, 2007 - 406 pages Thoroughly updated and revised, the third edition of The Gendered Society explores current thinking about gender, both inside academia and in our everyday lives. Michael S. Kimmel challenges the claim that gender is limited to women's experiences--his compelling and balanced study of gender includes both masculine and feminine perspectives. Part 1 examines the latest work in biology, anthropology, psychology, and sociology; Part 2 provides an original analysis of the gendered worlds of family, education, and work; and Part 3 explores gender interactions, including friendship and love, sexuality, and violence. Kimmel makes three bold and persuasive statements about gender. First, he demonstrates that gender differences are often extremely exaggerated; in fact, he argues that men and women have much more in common than we think they do. Kimmel also challenges the pop psychologists who suggest that gender A new chapter on media examines the portrayal of gender in one of the most powerful--and provocative--social institutions. Of particular interest to students, Kimmel's analysis of this dynamic, image-driven industry makes the study of gender relevant in an immediate and tangible way. Essential reading for both students and scholars, The Gendered Society is an authoritative, incisive, and lively statement about contemporary gender relations from one of the country's foremost thinkers on the subject. Kimmel's companion text, The Gendered Society Reader, Third Edition (OUP, 2008), |
From inside the book
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... BRAIN AND " HER " BRAIN Biologists have also focused on the brain to explain the differences between women and men . This approach , too , has a long history . In the eighteenth century , experts measured women's brains and men's brains ...
... brain dominates , but rather the degree to which the brain was lateralized - that is , had a higher level of differentiation between the two hemispheres that determined sex differences . Buffery and Gray found that female brains were ...
... brain is different in men and women . In his experiment , LeVay examined the brain tissues of forty - one deceased people . Nineteen of these had died of AIDS and were identified as part of the risk group “ homosexual and bisexual men ...
Contents
Biology Constructs the Sexes | 19 |
Culture Constructs Gender | 54 |
Psychoanalytic | 77 |
Copyright | |
11 other sections not shown