Module III GENDER AND SOCIETY
Module III GENDER AND SOCIETY
Module III GENDER AND SOCIETY
0 10-July-2020
MODULE OVERVIEW
Human beings, unlike animals, are not heavily dependent on instinct. Human
societies are extraordinarily cooperative compared to those of most other animals. In the
vast majority of species, individuals live solitary lives, meeting to only to mate and,
sometimes, raise their young. In social species, cooperation is limited to relatives and
(maybe) small groups of reciprocators. After a brief period of maternal support, individuals
acquire virtually all of the food that they eat. There is little division of labor, no trade, and no
large scale conflict. Communication is limited to a small repertoire of self-verifying signals.
No one cares for the sick, or feeds the hungry or disabled. The strong take from the weak
without fear of sanctions by third parties. Amend Hobbes to account for nepotism, and his
picture of the state of nature is not so far off for most other animals. In contrast, people in
even the simplest human societies regularly cooperate with many unrelated individuals.
Human language allows low-cost honest communication of virtually unlimited complexity.
The sick are cared for, and sharing leads to substantial flows of food from the middle aged
to the young and old. Division of labor and trade are prominent features of every historically
known human society, and archaeology indicates that they have a long history. Violent
conflict among sizable groups is common. In every human society, social life is regulated
by commonly held moral systems that specify the rights and duties of individuals enforced,
albeit imperfectly, by third party sanctions.
More than these instinct- driven actions, human are distinct from other beings because
they possess systems of meanings that tell what is right or wrong, and good or evil. Most
of what people do is shaped or determined by these systems. For instance, procreation is
an instinct as there is drive in people toward procreation. However, this urge takes different
forms. These decisions all depend on the meaning people give to procreation. These
choices are shaped not by instinct but by a frame of understanding that determines a
person’s giving meaning to society.
This frame of understanding is what Clifford Geertz, calls culture. Culture is the
system of symbols that allows people to give meaning to experience. It bears all the
accumulated knowledge of people coded into symbols that will help them interpret what is
happening to or around them, and how they can give an appropriate response to the
experience. This system is necessary because when event or phenomenon takes place,
people need to respond to it in way that is rational to them. The meaning of a stimulus and
the kind of response appropriate to it depend on one’s systems of understanding. Every
person has internalized shortcuts for giving meaning and meaningful responses coded into
system, especially inherited culture.
Culture provides people with system of shortcuts for meaningful interpretation and
responses.
How do birds know to migrate south for the winter? How do Border Collies know
to herd sheep? How do sea turtles find their way back to the ocean when they hatch?
For hundreds of years, scientists and philosophers have struggled over
possible explanations. In time, one word came to dominate the discussion: instinct.
It became the catch-all explanation for those adaptive and complex abilities that
do not obviously result from learning or experience.
Instinct or innate behavior is the inherent inclination of living organism towards a
particular complex behavior.
All humans have three main survival instincts:
Self-Preservation
Sexual and
Social
Our enneagram type is a strategy used to meet the needs of these three instinctual
drives. Our personality tends to have an imbalance with the three rather than use them
equally. Which one do you think you most identify with? Before understanding how our
particular type interacts with our particular instinct, it’s important to have a thorough
understanding of what each instinct is in its natural state.
Self- Preservation
The self-preservation survival instinct is the instinct of physical self-protection. As
living species, our bodies are the catalyst for our lives. This is the most basic ubiquitous
survival instinct. If our bodies fail, we cannot live. This instinct is concerned primarily with
one’s own physical body and its health, stability, protection, and ultimately that it continues
to live.
Sexual
The sexual survival instinct is the instinct of attraction and seduction. Beyond the
physical drive to actually have sex, this instinct is the drive to attract sex. As a species,
mating is a means of keeping the human race alive. However it is often not easy to ensure
a mating partner. We have choice in which we mate with, and humans have developed
attraction strategies to ensure that they are consistently able to seduce the interest of a
mate. Sexual selection has ensured that our most attractive qualities be genetically passed
on through the ages. For example, the female peacock is attracted to large, colourful
plumage, and so it evolved to grow larger and more elaborate. In people, this instinct is an
over-identification with the attraction strategies and elements of mating (beyond the act of
copulation itself).
Social
The social survival instinct is the instinct of connection. Connection is a gigantic
domain and so this instinct is multi-faceted and adaptable, which is part of its innate skill.
The prehistoric human brain became larger and larger very quickly, which resulted in
offspring being born out of the womb less developed in growth than other species. Many
species’ offspring are born almost fully formed, and the period of infancy is much shorter.
However, because the human brain is so large, offspring were born early with a long period
of helplessness before adulthood. This meant that young sapiens needed a strong bond
with a caregiver that could protect them for several years, including the parents and other
tribe members. The red-alert response we get when we hear a baby crying is the social
protection drive in all of us.
CULTURE
Consists of the beliefs, behaviors, objects, and other characteristics common to the
members of a particular group or society.The word “culture” derives from a French term,
which in turn derives from the Latin “colere,” which means to tend to the earth and grow, or
cultivation and nurture. A culture is a way of life of a group of people—the behaviors,
beliefs, values, and symbols that they accept, generally without thinking about them,
and that are passed along by communication and imitation from one generation to the next.
Characteristics of Culture
biological needs such as food, sleep, and sex, the way we fulfill those needs varies
cross-culturally.
Culture is shared. Because we share culture with other members of our group, we
are able to act in socially appropriate ways as well as predict how others will act.
Despite the shared nature of culture, that doesn’t mean that culture is homogenous
(the same). The multiple cultural worlds that exist in any society are discussed in
detail below.
Culture is based on symbols. A symbol is something that stands for something else.
Symbols vary cross-culturally and are arbitrary. They only have meaning when
people in a culture agree on their use. Language, money and art are all symbols.
Language is the most important symbolic component of culture.
Culture is integrated. This is known as holism, or the various parts of a culture being
interconnected. All aspects of a culture are related to one another and to truly
understand a culture, one must learn about all of its parts, not only a few.
Culture is dynamic. This simply means that cultures interact and change. Because
most cultures are in contact with other cultures, they exchange ideas and symbols.
All cultures change, otherwise, they would have problems adapting to changing
environments. And because cultures are integrated, if one component in the system
changes, it is likely that the entire system must adjust.
The diversity of cultural practices and adaptations to the problems of human existence
often lead some to question which practices are the best. Ethnocentrism is when one
views their own culture as the best and only proper way to behave and adapt.
Since most humans believe their culture is the best and only way to live, there are
small amounts of ethnocentrism everywhere in the world.
Small doses help to create a sense of cultural pride and to build strong, cohesive
groups.
the standards of another. Under this principle, no culture is better than any other and
cultures can only be judged on whether they are meeting the needs of their own
people.
Most individuals are members of multiple cultural worlds. Culture exists at several
levels. We typically refer to smaller cultures within a larger culture as subcultures. People
have some type of connection to that subculture but must also be able to operate effectively
within the larger culture. Some of the diversity we see across subcultures is based on class,
race, ethnicity, age, and gender. Social stratification is often the result of our recognition of
these worlds as different and a belief that they are somehow inferior to our own or to the
larger culture.
Class is a social category based on people’s economic position in society. Not all
societies exhibit class differences; ones who do not are called egalitarian. Class
societies are hierarchical, with one class having more access to resources than
others. Class is a recent feature of culture, as all early humans lived in egalitarian
bands or tribes.
Age is both a biological fact as well as being culturally constructed. While we can
reckon how many years old an individual is (biological age), what that means in
All cultural knowledge does not perpetually accumulate. At the same time that new
cultural traits are added, some old ones are lost because they are no longer useful. For
example, most city dwellers today do not have or need the skills required for survival in a
wilderness. Most would very likely starve to death because they do not know how to
acquire wild foods and survive the extremes of weather outdoors. What are more important
in modern urban life are such things as the ability to drive a car, use a computer, and
understand how to obtain food in a supermarket or restaurant.
The regular addition and subtraction of cultural traits results in culture change. All
cultures change over time--none is static. However, the rate of change and the aspects
of culture that change vary from society to society. For instance, people in Germany today
generally seem eager to adopt new words from other languages, especially from American
English, while many French people are resistant to it because of the threat of "corrupting"
their own language. However, the French are just as eager as the Germans to adopt new
technology.
LEARNING ACTIVITY 1
Sexism in a society is most commonly applied against women and girls. It functions
to maintain patriarchy, or male domination, through ideological and material practices of
individuals, collectives, and institutions that oppress women and girls on the basis of sex
or gender. Such oppression usually takes the forms of economic exploitation and social
domination. Sexist behaviours, conditions, and attitudes perpetuate stereotypes of social
(gender) roles based on one’s biological sex. A common form of socialization that is based
in sexist concepts teaches particular narratives about traditional gender roles for males and
females. According to such a view, women and men are opposite, with widely different and
complementary roles: women are the weaker sex and less capable than men, especially in
the realm of logic and rational reasoning. Women are relegated to the domestic realm of
nurturance and emotions and, therefore, according to that reasoning, cannot be good
leaders in business, politics, and academia. Although women are seen as naturally fit for
domestic work and are superb at being caretakers, their roles are devalued or not valued at
all when compared with men’s work.
Sexism And Feminism
The disentanglement of gender (and thus gender roles and gender identities) from
biological sex was an accomplishment in large part of feminism, which claimed that one’s
sex does not predict anything about one’s ability, intelligence, or personality. Extracting
social behavior from biological determinism allowed greater freedom for women and girls
from stereotypical gender roles and expectations. Feminist scholarship was able to focus
study on ways in which the social world subordinated women by discriminating against and
limiting them on the basis of their biological sex or of sociocultural gender-role
expectations. The feminist movement fought for the abolishment of sexism and the
establishment of women’s rights as equal under the law. By the remediation of sexism in
institutions and culture, women would gain equality in political representation, employment,
education, domestic disputes, and reproductive rights.
differentially affect men and women and has since begun to focus on the concepts of
hegemonic masculinity and hegemonic femininity to address the oppressive aspect as well
as the agency aspect of gender conformity and resistance.
LEARNING ACTIVITY 2
For this part of the lesson, you will engage in an exercise that will make you more
aware of your rationalities.
Answer these following questions:
What are the characteristics of an ideal woman in your community?
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Do you feel that the acceptable behavior you identified violate fundamental
characteristics of human beings? It is bad based on what is being human really is? If
so, why are there differences among groups? If not, what could be the source of the
conceptions of acceptable and unacceptable behavior?
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SUMMARY
REFERENCES
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/
238212623_Culture_and_the_Evolution_of_the_Human_Social_Instincts
https://www2.palomar.edu/anthro/culture/culture_2.htm
https://www.britannica.com/topic/sexism
https://humanecivilization.org/chapter-3-philosophical-scientific-basis-of-political-thoughts-
natural-ethics/3-3-human-instincts-and-culture-psychiatric-problems/
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