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Gendered Lives Chapter 1 The Study of Communication, Gender & Culture I. Communication, Gender, and Culture as an Area of Study • A. Expanded Knowledge of Gender, Communication, Culture • 1. Only the last 20 years… • 2. 110,000 B. The Value of Studying Communication, Gender, & Culture • 1. Learning about communication, gender, and culture: • a. Help you understand and critique gendered patterns of interaction • b. Enhances insight into own gender • c. Strengthens effectiveness as a communicator II. Gender In a Transitional Era • A. On one level • 1. Think women and men equal • B. On another level • 1. May hold traditional views •It depends on your frame of reference • C. Thoughts vs. Actions III. Differences Between Women & Men • A. Are men and women really that different?? • B. Several variables influence us such as: • C. Essentializing • Presume all members of sex alike IV. Relationships among Gender, Culture, & Communication • Gender, culture, communication interlinked • Cannot study one without understanding other two A. Sex • 1. Sex = designation based on biology • 2. Gender = socially constructed and expressed • a. Sex and gender usually go together • b. Can be inconsistent A. Sex • 3. Male or female based on external genitalia and internal sex organs • a. Genitalia and sex markers determined by chromosomes •XX •XY A. Sex • 4. Hormones influence development • a. Fetuses with Y bathed in androgens (Development of male sex organs) • b. Fetuses without Y - fewer androgens (Development of female sex organs) A. Sex • 5. Influence of hormones continues throughout lifetime • a. Males more sensitive to hormonal activity • 6. Biology influences how we develop but doesn’t determine behavior or personality A. Sex • 7. Some people are born with biological characteristics of each sex • a. Traditionally called hermaphrodites •Today the term intersexed is preferred B. Gender • RECAP: • Born male or female (sex) • Learn to act masculine and/or feminine (gender) •Gender changes over time B. Gender • 1. Gender depends on a society’s values, and varies from culture to culture • In America •Masculine = strong, successful, rational, emotionally controlled •Feminine = attractive, nurturing, deferential, expressive B. Gender • 2. Gender is learned • 3. We do not passively receive gender • 4. Gender is not stable • Gender queer • Androgynous • Transgendered • Transexual B. Gender • 5. Relational concept • Femininity and masculinity make sense in relation • Meanings of gender are also changed by: •Personal communication •Role models •Interactions with friends • As meanings of one changes – so do meanings of the other C. Culture • 1. Culture = structures, institutions, practices that reflect and uphold social order • Upheld by defining certain groups, values, expectations, as good C. Culture • 2. Surrounded by communication that announces social views of gender • 3. Global variations • Mead (1968) • Hofstede http://www.clearlycultural.com/geert-hofstede-cultural- dimensions/masculinity/ • 4. Western culture is patriarchal • Pre and Post Industrial Revolution • 5. Ethnic variations D. Communication • 1. Communication is dynamic • Continually changes, evolves • No beginnings or endings D. Communication • 2. Communication is systemic • Culture has the largest impact on how we communicate • 3. All aspects of communication are interlinked • Influenced by how we feel • Time of day, etc. may be influence D. Communication • 4. Communication has two levels: • a. Content level of meaning •Literal meaning • b. Relationship level of meaning •Tell how to interpret content and how communicators see themselves in relationship D. Communication • 5. Meanings created through interaction with symbols • Humans symbol-using creatures • Have to think to figure out what symbol means • Symbols can be ambiguous •More than one meaning