Monday, September 30, 2019
Distinction of Sex and Gender
1. The sex/gender distinction. The terms ââ¬Ësexââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëgenderââ¬â¢ mean different things to different feminist theorists and neither are easy or straightforward to characterize. Sketching out some feminist history of the terms provides a helpful starting point. 1. 1 Biological determinism Most people ordinarily seem to think that sex and gender are coextensive: women are human females, men are human males. Many feminists have historically disagreed and have endorsed the sex/ gender distinction.Provisionally: ââ¬Ësexââ¬â¢ denotes human females and males depending on biological features (chromosomes, sex organs, hormones and other physical features);ââ¬Ëgenderââ¬â¢ denotes women and men depending on social factors (social role, position, behaviour or identity). The main feminist motivation for making this distinction was to counter biological determinism or the view that biology is destiny. A typical example of a biological determinist view is that of Ged des and Thompson who, in 1889, argued that social, psychological and behavioural traits were caused by metabolic state.Women supposedly conserve energy (being ââ¬Ëanabolicââ¬â¢) and this makes them passive, conservative, sluggish, stable and uninterested in politics. Men expend their surplus energy (being ââ¬Ëkatabolicââ¬â¢) and this makes them eager, energetic, passionate, variable and, thereby, interested in political and social matters. These biological ââ¬Ëfactsââ¬â¢ about metabolic states were used not only to explain behavioural differences between women and men but also to justify what our social and political arrangements have to be.It would be inappropriate to grant women political rights, as they are simply not suited to have those rights; it would also be futile since women (due to their biology) would simply not be interested in exercising their political rights. To counter this kind of biological determinism, feminists have argued that behavioural and psychological differences have social, rather than biological, causes. For instance, Simone de Beauvoir famously claimed that one is not born, but rather becomes a woman, and that ââ¬Å"social discrimination produces in women moral and intellectual effects so profound that they appear to be caused by natureâ⬠.Commonly observed behavioural traits associated with women and men, then, are not caused by anatomy or chromosomes. Rather, they are culturally learned or acquired. Although biological determinism of the kind endorsed by Geddes and Thompson is nowadays uncommon, the idea that behavioural and psychological differences between women and men have biological causes has not disappeared. In the 1970s, sex differences were used to argue that women should not become airline pilots since they will be hormonally unstable once a month and, therefore, unable to perform their duties as well as men (Rogers 1999, 11).More recently, differences in male and female brains have been said to explain behavioural differences; in particular, the anatomy of corpus callosum, a bundle of nerves that connects the right and left cerebral hemispheres, is thought to be responsible for various psychological and behavioural differences. 1. 2 Gender terminology In order to distinguish biological differences from social/psychological ones and to talk about the latter, feminists appropriated the term ââ¬Ëgenderââ¬â¢.Psychologists writing on trans sexuality were the first to employ gender terminology in this sense. However, in order to explain why some people felt that they were ââ¬Ëtrapped in the wrong bodiesââ¬â¢, the psychologist Robert Stoller (1968) began using the terms ââ¬Ësexââ¬â¢ to pick out biological traits and ââ¬Ëgenderââ¬â¢ to pick out the amount of femininity and masculinity a person showed. Along with psychologists like Stoller, feminists found it useful to distinguish sex and gender.This enabled them to argue that many differences between women and men were socially produced and, therefore, changeable. For instance Gayle Rubin's thought was that although biological differences are fixed, gender differences are the oppressive results of social interventions that dictate how women and men should behave. Women are oppressed as women and ââ¬Å"by having to be womenâ⬠(Rubin 1975, 204). However, since gender is social, it is thought to be changeable and adjustable by political and social reform that would ultimately bring an end to women's subordination.Feminism should aim to create a ââ¬Å"genderless (though not sexless) society, in which one's sexual anatomy is irrelevant to who one is, what one does, and with whom one makes loveâ⬠(Rubin 1975, 204). In some earlier interpretations, like Rubin's, sex and gender were thought to complement one another. The slogan ââ¬ËGender is the social interpretation of sexââ¬â¢ captures this view. Nicholson calls this ââ¬Ëthe coat-rack viewââ¬â¢ of gender: our sexed bodies are like coat racks and ââ¬Å"provide the site upon which gender [is] constructedâ⬠(1994, 81).Gender conceived of as masculinity and femininity is superimposed upon the ââ¬Ëcoat-rackââ¬â¢ of sex as each society imposes on sexed bodies their cultural conceptions of how males and females should behave. This socially constructs gender differences ââ¬â or the amount of femininity/masculinity of a personââ¬â upon our sexed bodies. That is, according to this interpretation, all humans are either male or female; their sex is fixed. But cultures interpret sexed bodies differently and project different norms on those bodies thereby creating feminine and masculine persons.So, this group of feminist arguments against biological determinism suggested that gender differences result from cultural practices and social expectations. Nowadays it is more common to denote this by saying that gender is socially constructed. This means that genders (women and men) and gendere d traits (like being nurturing or ambitious) are the ââ¬Å"intended or unintended product[s] of a social practiceâ⬠(Haslanger 1995, 97). But which social practices construct gender, what social construction is and what being of a certain gender amounts to are major feminist controversies.There is no consensus on these issues. (See the entry on Intersections between Analytic and Continental Feminism for more on different ways to understand gender. ) 5. Conclusion This entry first looked at feminist arguments against biological determinism and the claim that gender is socially constructed. Next, it examined feminist critiques of prevalent understandings of gender and sex, and the distinction itself. In response to these concerns, the final section looked at how a unified women's category could be articulated for feminist political purposes and illustrated (at least) two things.First, that gender ââ¬â or what it is to be a woman or a man ââ¬â is still very much a live is sue. Second, that feminists have not entirely given up the view that gender is about social factors and that it is (in some sense) distinct from biological sex. The jury is still out on what the best, the most useful or (even) the correct definition of gender is. And some contemporary feminists still find there to be value in the original 1960s sex/gender distinction.
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