In this book called School Talk: gender and adolescent
culture written by Donna Eder with the help of Catherine Colleen Evans and
Stephen Parker starts off by talking about the misunderstanding between men and
women. How it starts when children are young and usually in middle school. When
girls and boys not being able to understand each other at a young age, they
grow up having these stereotypes about the opposite sex(9). These can often cause gender inequality
because men often look at women as emotional, needed, insecure and
unassertive. Likewise women have this
stereotype of men being rude, assertive, sexual, and even emotionless. So
understanding gender is something that should be learned or at least attempted
to be understood since it plays a big role in the lives of people in the future.
Another thing that they talked about was the interaction
between the girls and boys at school. They stated that as children during
elementary and middle school the girls and boys are segregated. They don’t play
together at recess and they don’t sit with each other at lunch (14). They
stated that the gender in middle school and Junior high is constructed by the
peer’s influences to move up socially. So boys are know to be more socially
accepted if they succeed though athletics ability, being cool or being tough.
Unlike girls who move up socially though their family background, appearance,
and have a lot of freedom when it comes to social things (14).
This book touches on a couple topics that pertained to
constructing gender but the last one I want to talk about pertained to boys and
there necessity to be manly tough and not wimps. Boys are taught though
watching family members, peers and most commonly though media that men are
supposed to be strong tough and aggressive (61). Many boys look to sports as a
way to express their manliness. Playing sports such as football, hockey,
basketball, and wrestling all sport that are very contact and require a lot of
aggression. They talked about how the boys tend to call each other names but
the names they call each other are usually demining and imply some sort of
weakness. For example:
o
Pud
o
Squirt
o
Wimp
o
Girl
o
Fag
o
Queer
o
Pussy
These are all things that lack toughness and make you
question someone’s gender, they also happen to be names that are linked with
femininity and homosexuality (63).
Eder, Donna, Catherine Colleen, and
Stephen Parker. School Talk: Gender and Adolescent culture. New Jersey: Rutgers
University Press, 1995. Print
Cassie Wilson
This book sounds really interesting. When it talks about middle school kids and how they interact with each other and not understanding their peers at a young age, to me, it shows exactly how we all grow up knowing the stereotypes of the opposite sex. Thinking back to when I was that age, I acted the same way. Boys and girls playing separately, eating lunch with the same sex, and not wanting to socialize with the other sex.
ReplyDeleteThis book seems like it gives you an understanding as to how we grow up in these roles and how it's so hard to get out of them. Would have been really cool if we could have looked into it further in class!
Forgot to sign my name! =D
DeleteSam