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Gender, Ethnicity, and Social Stratification

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Title: Gender, Ethnicity, and Social Stratification


1
Gender, Ethnicity, and Social Stratification
2
Gender and Anthropology
  • interest in hierarchical relations between men
    and women has been a feature of anthropology
    since its earliest days
  • anthropology of gender has been key in
    establishing that sexual inequality is not a
    biological fact but instead and cultural and
    historical one
  • the body is "simultaneously a physical and
    symbolic artifact, both naturally and culturally
    produced, anchored in a particular historical
    moment" (Scheper-Hughes Lock)

3
development of the study of sex, sexuality and
gender in anthropology
  • Anthropology of Women early 1970's attention to
    the lack of women in standard ethnographies
  • Anthropology of Gender challenged the basis for
    understanding social roles of male and female
  • Feminist Anthropology challenged the biological
    basis of sex and sexuality
  • and the foundations of anthropology as it had
    been done

4
SEX, SEXUALITY, GENDER
  • not the same thing
  • all societies distinguish between males and
    females
  • a very few societies recognize a third, sexually
    intermediate category

5
SEX
  • differences in biology
  • Socially culturally marked/constructed

6
SEXUALITY (reproduction)
  • all societies regulate sexuality
  • lots of variation cross-culturally
  • degree of restrictiveness not always consistent
    through life span
  • adolescence vs. adulthood
  • Varieties of normative sexual orientation
  • Heterosexual, homosexual, transexual
  • Sexuality in societies change over time

7
GENDER
  • GENDER - the cultural construction of male
    female characteristics
  • vs. the biological nature of men women
  • SEX differences are biological - GENDER
    differences are cultural
  • behavioral attitudinal differences from social
    cultural rather than biological point of view

8
GENDER ROLES, STEREOTYPES, STRATIFICATION
  • gender roles - tasks activities that a culture
    assigns to sexes
  • gender stereotypes - oversimplified strongly held
    ideas about the characteristics of men women
    third sex-third gender
  • gender stratification - unequal distribution of
    rewards (socially valued resources, power,
    prestige, personal freedom) between men women
    reflecting their position in the social hierarchy

9
universals versus particulars
  • universal subordination of women is often cited
    as one of the true cross-cultural universals, a
    pan-cultural fact
  • Engels called it the world historical defeat of
    women
  • even so the particulars of womens roles,
    statuses, power, and value differ tremendously by
    culture

10
persistence of dualisms in ideologies of gender
  • a particular view of men and women as opposite
    kinds of creatures both biologically and
    culturally
  • nature/culture
  • domestic/public
  • reproduction/production

11
Reproduction and Social Roles
  • roles - those minimal institutions and modes of
    activity that are organized immediately around
    one or more mothers and their children
  • women everywhere lactate give birth to children
  • likely to be associated with child rearing
    responsibilities of the home

12
a long running controversy in anthropology
  • Sherry Ortners famous article Is Female to Male
    as Nature is to Culture
  • argument is that across cultures, women are more
    often associated with nature and the natural and
    are therefore denigrated
  • Ortner - in reality women are no further nor
    closer to nature than men - cultural valuations
    make women appear closer to nature than men

13
The Third Gender
  • essentialism of western ideas of sexual
    dimorphism - dichotomized into natural then
    moral entities of male female that are given to
    all persons, one or the other
  • committed western view of sex and gender as
    dichotomous, ascribed, unchanging
  • other categories - every society including our
    own is at some time or other faced with people
    who do not fit into its sex gender categories

14
The Third Gender
  • a significant number of people are born with
    genitalia that is neither clearly male or female
  • Hermaphrodites
  • persons who change their biological sex
  • persons who exhibit behavior deemed appropriate
    for the opposite sex
  • persons who take on other gender roles other than
    those indicated by their genitals

15
Third Gender Western Bias
  • multiple cultural historical worlds in which
    people of divergent gender sexual desire exist
  • margins or borders of society
  • may pass as normal to remain hidden in the
    official ideology everyday commerce of social
    life
  • when discovered - iconic matter out of place -
    "monsters of the cultural imagination
  • third gender as sexual deviance a common theme in
    US
  • evolution religious doctrine
  • heterosexuality the highest form, the most moral
    way of life, its natural

16
Third Gender Cross-Culturally
  • provokes us to reexamine our own assumptions
    regarding our gender system
  • emphasizes gender role alternatives as
    adaptations to economic and political conditions
    rather than as "deviant" and idiosyncratic
    behavior
  • rigid dichotomozation of genders is a means of
    perpetuating the domination of females by males
    and patriarchal institutions.

17
RETHINKING SUBORDINATION
  • Ardener - muted models that underlie male
    discourse
  • diversity of one life or many lives
  • gender roles, stereotypes, stratification
  • changes over time
  • changes with position in lifecycle
  • status of men women i.e. in male dominant
    societies
  • decision making roles belong to men but as women
    reach menopause change with marriage status,
    virgins, wives, widows (and men)

18
RETHINKING SUBORDINATION
  • women, like men, are social actors who work in
    structured ways to achieve desired ends
  • formal authority structure of a society may
    declare that women are impotent irrelevant
  • but attention to women's strategies motives,
    sorts of choices, relationships established, ends
    achieved indicates women have good deal of power
  • strategies appear deviant disruptive
  • actual components of how social life proceeds

19
Social difference
  • Basis for recognition of difference within and
    between social groups
  • Relationship to political power and inequality
  • Beyond the face to face community

20
Status Social Difference
  • status - ascribed achieved
  • ascribed status - social positions that people
    hold by virtue of birth
  • sex, age, family relationships, birth into class
    or caste
  • achieved status - social positions attained as a
    result of individual action
  • shift from homogeneous kin based societies
    (mechanic) to heterogeneous societies of
    associations (organic) involves growth in
    importance of achieved

21
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22
Social Stratification
  • inequality in society
  • the unequal distribution of goods and services,
    rights and obligations, power and prestige
  • all attributes of positions in society, not
    attributes of individuals
  • Stratified society is
  • when a society exhibits stratification it means
    that there are significant breaks in the
    distribution of goods services, rights
    obligations power prestige
  • as a result of which are formed collectivities or
    groups we call strata

23
race
  • There are no biological human races
  • up until 14th cent. in Europe cultural social
    evolution based on the idea of progress from
    kin-based societies to civil society through
    governance law
  • after 16th cent. in Europe ideas of blood were
    used to characterize difference

24
race and social difference
  • Race as social grouping based on perceived
    physical differences and cloaked in the language
    of biology
  • social races groups assumed to have a
    biological basis but social constructed
  • Racism systematic social and political bias
    based on idea of race
  • Operates as a form of class

25
Social races
  • Race exists as a cultural construct
  • Racism builds upon idea that personality is
    linked with hereditary characteristics which
    differ between races
  • Race is important for academics studying local
    discourses on ethnicity
  • Race relations as a special case of ethnicity
  • Race as the categorization of people
  • Operates as an ASCRIBED status of personhood

26
American Anthropological Assoc. statement on race
  • Evidence from the analysis of genetics (e.g.,
    DNA) indicates that most physical variation,
    about 94, lies within so-called racial groups.
  • Conventional geographic racial groupings differ
    from one another only in about 6 of their
    genes.
  • Race thus evolved as a world view, a body of
    prejudgments that distorts our ideas about human
    differences and group behavior.
  • The racial world view was invented to assign
    some groups to perpetual low status, while others
    were permitted access to privilege, power, and
    wealth

27
from race to ethnicity
  • ethnicity forged in the process of historical
    time
  • subject to shifts in meaning
  • shifts in referents or markers of ethnic identity
  • subject to political manipulations
  • ethnic identity is not a function of primordial
    ties, although it may be described as such
  • always the genesis of specific historical forces
    that are simultaneously structural cultural

28
building blocks of ethnicity/ethnic identity
  • associated with distinctions between language,
    religion, historical experience, geographic
    isolation, kinship, notions of race (phenotype)
  • may include collective name, belief in common
    descent, sense of solidarity, association with a
    specific territory, clothing, house types,
    personal adornment, food, technology, economic
    activities, general lifestyle

29
cultural markers of difference must be visible to
members and non-members
  • valued markers of difference by insiders may
    become comic or derided by outsiders
  • caricature and exaggeration frequently mark
    outsider depictions of boundary mechanisms
  • stereotype is one form

30
ethnicity and boundaries
  • where there is a group there is some sort of
    boundary
  • where there are boundaries there are mechanisms
    for maintaining boundaries
  • cultural markers of difference that must be
    visible to members and non-members
  • Code switching
  • Marked and unmarked categories

31
Boundary maintenance
  • Social boundaries that may have territorial
    counterparts
  • The ethnic boundary canalizes social life
    complex organization of behavior and social
    relations playing the same game
  • Distinctions between us and them criteria for
    judgement of value and performance and
    restrictions on interactions
  • Allows for the persistence of cultural
    differences
  • Identities are signaled as well as embraced
  • All ethnic groups in a poly-ethnic society act to
    maintain dichotomies and differences

32
ethnogenesis
  • fluidity of ethnic identity
  • ethnic groups vanish, people move between ethnic
    groups, new ethnic groups come into existence
  • ethnogenesis
  • emergence of new ethnic group, part of existing
    group splits forms new ethnic group, members of
    two or more groups fuse

33
political organization and ethnicity
  • ethnicity is founded upon structural inequities
    among dissimilar groups into a single political
    entity
  • based on cultural differences similarities
    perceived as shared

34
Ethnicity as identity formation and political
organization
  • Ethnic groups those human groups that entertain
    a SUBJECTIVE belief in their common descent
    because of similarities of physical type or of
    customs or of both, or because of memories of
    colonization and migration
  • Belief in group affinity can have important
    consequences for the formation of a political
    community
  • feelings of ethnicity associated behavior vary
    in intensity within groups ( persons) over time
    space
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