Sex and Gender in The Philippine Society
Sex and Gender in The Philippine Society
Sex and Gender in The Philippine Society
PHILIPPINE SOCIETY
A Discussion of Issues on the Relations Between Women and Men
Prayer
Our Father in Heaven, we ask you to
give us wisdom and guidance in all our
studies. Help us to make decisions
that align with your word and bring
glory to your name. Give us clarity so
that we don’t fall into the traps of
peer pressure. Give us insight on how
to manage crucial aspects of our life
and teach us to listen. In the mighty
name of Jesus, Amen.
CHAPTER I: SEX AND
GENDER
Gender Subordination
• Gender Subordination and the Economic System
• Gender Subordination and the Political System
• Gender Subordination and Sexuality
• Gender Subordination and Personhood
Gender Subordination
Gender has implications for equality between
women and men in society. Women were perceived
as “naturally” inferior to men, and that was the end
of the discussion.
By contrast, modern-day apologists of
gender, hard put to defend a male-female
dichotomy in the harsh light of egalitarian
ideologies, deny these implications, claiming that
gender differences do not make for inequality at all.
Their favorite slogan is that women and men are
“equal but different”- or, put another way; that
males and females have “complementary” roles on
human society.
Gender Subordination
According to this line of apology, society gives
us as much importance to feminine roles, qualities and
skills as it does to the masculine – and therefore no one
need complain; indeed, to try to eradicate the
differences would destroy the very fabric to society. A
well-known sociologist of the early 20th century even
went so far as to claim that the specialization of labor
between the sexes is mark of advanced civilization. A
more complicated line of gender apologetics, prevalent
among Filipino males (and some females), is that these
differences make for female superiority - that Filipino
society is a matriarchy in which Filipino women have
the best of the situation.
Gender Subordination
Gender limits the potential of both men and women.
This limitation means more than mere gender
discrimination: the gender system supports and interacts
with other social systems which keep most people, women
and men, from achieving full and dignified lives. However,
in most gender systems, including that in dominant
Philippine society, women suffer more problems and
limitations than men; they are, in Simone de Beuvoir’s
words, “the second sex”. “Gender subordination” is the
phrase which describe the secondary position of women
vis-à-vis men in society. “Male dominance”, on the other
hand, describes the position of men.
Gender Subordination
and the Economic System
The production-reproduction divide is the sexual
division of labor that prevails within the capital system.
• Rape
• Breadwinners
• Patriarchal Bargain
• Sexual relationships
• Homemakers
• Filipino women