The Gendered Society

Front Cover
Oxford University Press, 2011 - 458 pages
The Gendered Society, first Canadian edition, is an authoritative and incisive study of contemporary gender relations that challenges a common tendency to treat gender as an issue for women alone. Maintaining that gender differences are often exaggerated, the authors reveal how inequality is the cause rather than the product of those differences. Organized into three parts, the text explores concepts of gender through a variety of disciplines while discussing how gender permeates our everyday lives as a socially constructed phenomenon. Thoroughly revised and updated, this first Canadian edition is an engaging and comprehensive introduction to the sociological study of gender.

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About the author (2011)

Jacqueline Holler is associate professor and program chair of the Department of History, and coordinator of the Women's Studies program at the University of Northern British Columbia. In 2005, Jacqueline won UNBC's Excellence in Teaching Award. Her current research projects include aSSHRC-funded book-length study of the Cortes conspiracy of 1566 and a project on women's bodies, health, emotion, and sexuality in early colonial New Spain. Her research areas include women and gender in Latin American history; medicine, morbidity, melancholia, and the body in colonial Mexico;premodern political culture, ethnicity, and gender; and women and Catholicism.

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