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Sexuality in Children’s Literature Everything we read constructs us, makes us who we are, by presenting our image of ourselves as girls and women, as boys and men. (Mem Fox, 1993) • Besides being an important resource for developing children’s language skills, children’s books play a significant part in transmitting a society’s culture to children. • Gender roles are an important part of this culture. How genders are portrayed in children’s books thus contributes to the image children develop of their own roles and those of their gender in society. Sex Education? Comprehensive Sex Education • Sexual behavior is a human right. • Reducing risk is the goal. • Sex ed begins in kindergarten. • Sex ed includes contraception instruction. • Abortion is a choice and an alternative to pregnancy. • Gay, lesbian, bisexual, transsexual and questioning life-styles are embraced. • Individuals should feel free to discover who they are as sexual human beings by experimentation. • Parents are not necessary in the sex education process. Abstinence-Until-Marriage Education • Sexual abstinence until marriage eliminates health risks. • Children can achieve their goals and dreams without the distraction of consequences from sexual activity. • Delayed gratification is essential to adult maturity. • Learning to develop friendships without physical intimacy is essential to healthy marriages. • Multiple sexual partners can be dangerous to one's physical, emotional, mental and social health. • Parents are the primary sex educators of their children and are an essential part of abstinence-until-marriage education Gender bias exists These features are general trends seen by examining a large number of children’s books. • • • • • • • • • • • Male figures dominate. In stories with female protagonists, plots often revolve around males. Girls are often portrayed as acted upon rather than active. Females tend to be sweet, naive, conforming, and dependent. Boys tend to be strong, adventurous, independent, and capable. Boys have roles as fighters, adventurers and rescuers. Girls tend to be caretakers, mothers, princesses in need of rescuing, and characters that support the male figure. Girls achieve their goals because others help them. Boys achieve goals because of ingenuity and/or perseverance. If females are initially represented as active and assertive, they are often portrayed in a passive light toward the end of the story (or they may die). Girls who retain their active qualities are the exception. So what? • The manner in which genders are represented in children’s literature impacts children’s attitudes and perceptions of gender-appropriate behavior in society. – Sexism in literature quietly conditions boys and girls to accept the way they see and read the world, thus reinforcing gender images. – This reinforcement keeps children from questioning existing social relationships. – At the same time, however, books containing images that conflict with gender stereotypes provide children the opportunity to reexamine their gender beliefs and assumptions. Thus, texts can provide children with alternative role models and inspire them to adopt more egalitarian gender attitudes. Foucault: The History of Sexuality Sex & Sexuality • Sex is biological. • Sexuality is an idea constructed through language (discursively). • According to Foucault, Western cultures have separated sexuality from sex as a way to regulate it. Sexualization of children Foucault: The History of Sexuality • Discourse is important for shaping identity. • Sexuality (and its discourse) exists as a way for people to get power. • Institutions (government, schools, religious groups, families, etc.) – repress sexuality (cover private parts, don’t talk about certain things) – while talking about it all the time (advertisement, different clothing for boys and girls, jokes). – This makes sexuality more potent. The more it is publicly taboo, the more it is privately wished for. • This creates a society of sexually repressed and obsessed people. • There is power in release from social constraints. Foucault: The History of Sexuality • The specific pleasure of toying with the discourse of sexuality is grounded in the desire to at once control and exploit sexuality. – How do adults speak to children about sex? – What stories do parents tell children about where babies come from? • This all leads to a discourse that pretends to cloak, but actually exposes sexuality. Judith Butler: Gender Troubles • • • • Sex & Gender Sex is biological Gender is a culturally constructed expression of sexual difference. Male vs. female Masculine vs. feminine The New York Times Thursday, May 9, 2013 Sarah Wong’s Portraits of Dutch Transgendered Children Left: Dionne, 7, in 2006. Right: Dionne, 10, in 2009 http://6thfloor.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/08/23/sarah-wongs-portraits-of-dutchtransgendered-children/ Judith Butler: Gender Troubles • This distinction is not enough. • There is a problem with binaries of masculine and feminine as well as male female • It excludes, by its nature gay, lesbian, bisexual and transsexual (GLBT) individuals • These people become “incoherent and unintelligible as human subjects.” Judith Butler: Perfomativity • In linguistic theory, a statement that performs an act by the very fact of being uttered is called a performative statement. – For example, “I promise to pay you the money I owe you.” Is a statement that is itself the promise it speaks of. • Gender, according to Butler, is performed in a similar way. • “What we take to be real is, in fact, a changeable and revisable reality • Children’s literature is part of a culturally regulated frame that determines what sorts of gendered being appears to be natural. A humorous book? • Mommy Laid an Egg is obviously intended to be funny. 1. What makes it funny or not? Explain. 2. Who is embarrassed and why? 3. What ideas, actions, or behaviors considered normal and not normal? • Consider the same questions with the next book A humorous book? • King and King is obviously intended to be funny. 1. What makes it funny or not? Explain. 2. Who is embarrassed and why? 3. What ideas, actions, or behaviors considered normal and not normal?