Difference between revisions of "Gender" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
(Copied from wikipedia)
 
(44 intermediate revisions by 10 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Claimed}}
+
{{Images OK}}{{Submitted}}{{Approved}}{{Paid}}{{copyedited}}
 
[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
 
[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
 
[[Category:Sociology]]
 
[[Category:Sociology]]
  
 +
[[Image:Combotrans.svg|thumb|right|225px|The [[gender symbol]]s used to denote a female (left) or male (right) organism, derived from the astrological symbols of Venus and Mars.]]
  
 +
'''Gender''' traditionally refers to the differences between [[male|men]] and [[female|women]]. More recently, it has also referred to an individual's [[self]] [[perception]] of being male or female. Within the academic fields of [[cultural studies]], [[gender studies]], and the [[social sciences]] "gender" is used interchangeably both regarding "[[sex]]," and "[[identity]]," and is often used to described a [[gender role]].
  
[[Image:Combotrans.svg|thumb|right|The [[gender symbol]]s used to denote a female (left) or male (right) organism, derived from the astrological symbols of Venus and Mars.]]
+
Gender roles traditionally were often divided into distinct feminine and masculine roles until the late twentieth century,  when many jobs in both industrial and information-age societies could be performed by both [[male]]s and [[female]]s. In many modern [[society|societies]] gender no longer determines the work or household functions that an individual can perform, allowing greater equality for all people to compete in the workplace and earn a livable wage.
{{Otheruses}}
+
{{toc}}
"'''Gender'''", in common usage, refers to the differences between [[male|men]] and [[female|women]]. Encyclopaedia Britannica notes that [[gender identity]] is "an individual's self-conception as being male or female, as distinguished from actual biological sex."<ref>[http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9036351 Gender Identity], Encyclopædia Britannica Online, 2007.</ref> Although "gender" is commonly used interchangeably with "[[sex]]," within the academic fields of [[cultural studies]], [[gender studies]] and the [[social sciences]] in general, the term "gender" often refers to purely social rather than biological differences. Some view gender as a [[social construct]]ion rather than a biological phenomenon. People whose gender identity feels incongruent with their physical bodies may identify themselves as [[intersex]], [[transgender]] or [[genderqueer]].
+
In recent years, many societies have recognized same sex [[marriage]]s in which partners may or may not identify with specific gender roles. This can be important for legal purposes related to health benefits and estate inheritance for committed partnerships. However, biologically, it is only biological females who are capable of bearing children. Thus there is continued confusion about sex and gender roles related to [[marriage]] and sexual [[love]] in the structure of families. Rather than describing a loving partnership between individuals as [[marriage]], [[marriage]] as a social institution was traditionally related to raising children and establishing stable, peaceful, and happy societies. This can be confusing as it is often unclear whether laws concerning marriage are for the purpose of human partnerships or child-raising social institutions.  
  
Many languages have a system of [[grammatical gender]], a type of [[noun class]] system — nouns may be classified as ''masculine'' or ''feminine'' (for example [[Spanish language|Spanish]], [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]], [[Arabic language|Arabic]] and [[French language|French]]) or may also have a ''neuter'' grammatical gender (for example [[Sanskrit]], [[German language|German]] and [[Polish language|Polish]]). In such languages, this is essentially a [[Convention (norm)|convention]], which may have little or no connection to the meaning of the words. Likewise, a wide variety of phenomena have characteristics termed ''gender'', by analogy with male and female bodies (such as the [[gender of connectors and fasteners]]) or due to [[Norm (sociology)|societal norms]].
+
==Etymology and usage==
 +
The word '''gender''' comes from the [[Middle English]] ''gendre,'' a [[loanword]] from [[Normans|Norman]]-conquest-era [[Middle French]]. This, in turn, came from [[Latin]] ''genus''. Both words mean "kind," "type," or "sort." They derive ultimately from a widely attested [[Proto-Indo-European language|Proto-Indo-European]] (PIE) root ''g<sup>e</sup>n-''.<ref> Douglas Harper, [https://www.etymonline.com/word/gender gender] ''Online Etymology Dictionary''. Retrieved December 22, 2020.</ref>
  
==Etymology and usage==
+
In English, both "sex" and "gender" are used in contexts where they cannot be substituted—"sexual intercourse," "safe sex," "sex worker," or on the other hand, "grammatical gender." Other languages, like German or Dutch, use the same word, ''Geschlecht'' or ''Geslacht,'' to refer not only to biological sex, but social differences and grammatical gender as well, making a distinction between 'sex' and 'gender' difficult. In some contexts, German has adopted the English loanword ''Gender'' to achieve this distinction. Sometimes ''Geschlechtsidentität'' is used for "gender" (although it literally means "gender identity") and ''Geschlecht'' for "sex."
===The word ''gender'' in English===
 
;Gender = kind
 
The word ''gender'' comes from the [[Middle English]] ''gendre'', a [[loanword]] from [[Normans|Norman]]-conquest-era [[Middle French]]. This, in turn, came from [[Latin]] ''genus''. Both words mean 'kind', 'type', or 'sort'. They derive ultimately from a widely attested [[Proto-Indo-European language|Proto-Indo-European]] (PIE) root ''g<sup>e</sup>n-'',<ref>
 
Julius Pokorny, [http://www.indo-european.nl/cgi-bin/response.cgi?root=leiden&morpho=0&basename=\data\ie\pokorny&first=651 'gen'], in ''Indogermanisches etymologisches Wörterbuch'', (Bern: Francke, 1959, reprinted in 1989), pp. 373-75.</ref><ref>
 
[http://www.bartleby.com/61/roots/IE143.html 'gen<sup>ə</sup>-',] in 'Appendix I: Indo-European Roots', to ''[[The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language]]'', Fourth Edition, (Boston: [[Houghton Mifflin|Houghton Mifflin Company]], 2000).</ref>
 
which is also the source of ''kin'', ''kind'', ''king'' and many other English words.<ref>
 
Your Dictionary.com, [http://www.yourdictionary.com/ahd/roots/zzg00600.html 'Gen',] reformatted from AHD.</ref>
 
It appears in Modern [[French language|French]] in the word ''[[genre]]'' (type, kind) and is related to the [[Greek language|Greek]] root ''gen-'' (to produce), appearing in ''[[gene]]'', ''[[genesis]]'' and ''[[oxygen]]''.
 
<!-- Checked with OED 2nd ed. —>
 
As a verb, it means ''breed'' in the [[King James Version of the Bible|King James]] [[Bible]]:
 
*'''1616''': Thou shalt not let thy cattle '''gender''' with a diverse kind. — {{bibleref|Leviticus|19:19}}
 
  
Most of the uses of the root ''gen'' in Indo-European languages refer either directly to what pertains to birth
+
==Biological concept of gender==
or, by extension, to natural, innate qualities and their consequent social distinctions
 
(for example ''gentry'', ''gentile'', ''genocide'' and ''eugenics'').
 
The first edition of the [[Oxford English Dictionary]] (OED1, Volume 4, 1900) notes the original meaning of ''gender'' as 'kind' had already become obsolete.
 
<blockquote>
 
:'''Gender''' (dʒe'ndəɹ), ''sb''. Also 4 gendre. [a. OF. ''gen(d)re'' (F. ''genre'') = Sp. and Pg. ''genero'', It. ''genere'', ad. L. ''gener''- stem form of ''genus'' race, kind = Gr. γένος, Skr. ''jánas'':— OAryan *''genes''-, f. root γεν- to produce; cf. '''K<small 2>IN</small>'''.]
 
:†'''1.''' Kind, sort, class; also, genus as opposed to species. ''The general gender'': the common sort (of people). ''Obs.''
 
:'''13..''' ''E.E.Allit. P.'' P. 434 Alle gendrez so ioyst wern ioyned wyth-inne.  ''c'' '''1384''' C<small 2>HAUSER</small> ''H. Fame'''''*''' 1. 18 To knowe of hir signifiaunce The gendres.  '''1398'''  T<small 2>REVISA</small> ''Barth. De P. K.'' <small 2>VIII</small>. xxix. (1495) 34<sup>I</sup> Byshynynge and lyghte ben dyuers as species and gendre, for suery shinyng is lyght, but not ayenwarde.  '''1602''' S<small 2>HAKES</small>. ''Ham''. <small 2>IV</small>. vii. 18 The great loue the generall gender beare him.  '''1604''' — ''Oth''. <small 2>I</small>. iii. 326 Supplie it with one gender of Hearbes, or distract it with many.  '''1643''' and so on.
 
</blockquote>
 
;Gender = masculinity or femininity
 
The use of ''gender'' to refer to [[masculinity]] and [[femininity]] as types is attested throughout the history of [[Modern English]] (from about the [[14th century]]).
 
*'''1387-8''': No mo '''genders''' been there but masculine, and femynyne, all the remnaunte been no genders but of grace, in facultie of grammar. — [[Thomas Usk]], ''The Testament of Love'' II iii ([[Walter William Skeat]]) 13
 
*''c''. '''1460''':  Has thou oght written there of the femynyn '''gendere'''? — ''[[Wakefield Cycle|Towneley Mystery Plays]]'' xxx 161 Act One
 
*'''1632''': Here's a woman! The soul of Hercules has got into her. She has a spirit, is more masculine Than the first '''gender'''. — [[Shackerley Marmion]], ''Holland's Leaguer'' III iv
 
*'''1658''': The Psyche, or soul, of Tiresias is of the masculine '''gender'''. — [[Thomas Browne]], ''[[Hydriotaphia, Urn Burial|Hydriotaphia]]''
 
*'''1709''': Of the fair sex ... my only consolation for being of that '''gender''' has been the assurance it gave me of never being married to any one among them.
 
:— [[Lady Mary Wortley Montagu|Mary Wortley Montagu]], ''Letters to Mrs Wortley'' lxvi 108
 
*'''1768''': I may add the '''gender''' too of the person I am to govern — [[Laurence Sterne]], ''[[A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy]]''
 
*'''1859''': Black divinities of the feminine '''gender'''. — [[Charles Dickens]], ''[[A Tale of Two Cities]]''
 
*'''1874''': It is exactly as if there were a sex in mountains, and their contours and curves and complexions were here all of the feminine '''gender'''.
 
:— [[Henry James]], [http://cdl.library.cornell.edu/cgi-bin/moa/moa-cgi?notisid=ABK2934-0033-31 'A Chain of Italian Cities'], ''[[The Atlantic Monthly]]'' '''33''' (February, p. 162.)
 
*'''1892''': She was uncertain as to his '''gender'''. — [[Robert Grant (novelist)|Robert Grant]], [http://cdl.library.cornell.edu/cgi-bin/moa/moa-cgi?notisid=AFR7379-0011-43 'Reflections of a Married Man',] ''[[Scribner's Magazine]]'' '''11''' (March, p. 376.)
 
*'''1896''': As to one's success in the work one does, surely that is not a question of '''gender''' either. — ''[[News Chronicle|Daily News]]'' 17 July
 
*''c''. '''1900''': Our most lively impression is that the sun is there assumed to be of the feminine '''gender'''. — [[Henry James]], ''Essays on Literature''
 
;Gender = noun class
 
According to [[Aristotle]], the Greek philosopher [[Protagoras]] used the terms ''masculine'', ''feminine'', and ''neuter''
 
to classify nouns, introducing the concept of [[grammatical gender]].
 
*{{Polytonic|τὰ γένη τῶν ὀνομάτων ἄρρενα καὶ θήλεα καὶ σκεύη}}
 
*The tribes (''genē'') of the namers are ''males'' and ''females'' and ''things''.
 
:— Aristotle, ''[[Rhetoric (Aristotle)|The Technique of Rhetoric]]'' III v
 
The words for this concept are not related to ''gen-'' in all Indo-European languages (for example, ''rod'' in [[Slavic languages]]).
 
  
The usage of ''gender'' in the context of grammatical distinctions is a specific and technical usage.
+
Gender can refer to the biological condition of being male or female, or less commonly [[intersex]] or "[[third sex]]" as applied to humans, or [[hermaphroditic]], as applied to non-human [[animal]]s and [[plant]]s.
However, in English, the word became attested more widely in the context of grammar, than in making sexual distinctions.
 
This was noted in OED1, prompting [[Henry Watson Fowler]] to recommend
 
this usage as the primary and preferable meaning of ''gender'' in English.
 
"Gender ... is a grammatical term only. To talk of persons ... of the masculine or feminine g[ender], meaning of the male or female sex, is either a jocularity (permissible or not according to context) or a blunder."<ref>
 
[[Fowler's Modern English Usage]], 1926: p. 211.</ref>
 
The sense of this can be felt by analogy with a modern expression like "persons of the female persuasion." It should be noted, however, that this was a recommendation, neither the ''Daily Mail'' nor Henry James citations (above) are "jocular" nor "blunders." Additionally, patterns of usage of ''gender'' have substantially changed since Fowler's day (''noun class'' above, and ''sexual stereotype'' below).
 
;Gender = sexual stereotype
 
Over the course of the [[1970]]s, the feminist movement took the word ''gender'' into their own usage
 
to describe their theory of human nature.
 
Early in that decade, ''gender'' was used in ways consistent with
 
both the history of English and the history of attestation of the root.
 
<!-- citation in Feminist section of this article -->
 
However, by the end of the decade consensus was achieved in both theory and terminology.
 
The theory was that human nature is essentially [[epicene]] and social distinctions based on sex are arbitrarily constructed.
 
Matters pertaining to this theoretical process of social construction were labelled matters of ''gender''.
 
*'''1998''': Today a return to separate single-sex schools may hasten the revival of separate '''gender''' roles.
 
:— [[Wendy Kaminer]], [http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/prem/199804/single-sex 'The Trouble with Single-Sex Schools',] ''[[The Atlantic Monthly]]'' (April)
 
The [[American Heritage Dictionary]] uses the following two sentences to illustrate the difference.<ref name="difference"> [http://www.bartleby.com/61/59/G0075900.html Usage note: ''Gender'',] ''The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language'', Fourth Edition, (2000).</ref>
 
*'''2000''': The effectiveness of the medication appears to depend on the sex ''(not gender)'' of the patient.
 
*'''2000''': In peasant societies, gender ''(not sex)'' roles are likely to be more clearly defined.
 
  
In the last two decades of the 20th century, the use of ''gender'' in academia increased greatly,
+
[[Image:Peacock courting peahen.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Male-Female Differences]]
outnumbering uses of ''sex'' in the social sciences.<ref name="haig">
+
The biology of gender is scientific analysis of the physical basis for behavioral differences between men and women. It is more specific than [[sexual dimorphism]], which covers physical and behavioral differences between males and females of any sexually reproducing species, or [[sexual differentiation]], where physical and behavioral differences between men and women are described.
Haig, D. (2004). '[http://www.oeb.harvard.edu/faculty/haig/pdfs/04InexorableRise.pdf The Inexorable Rise of Gender and the Decline of Sex:] Social Change in Academic Titles, 1945–2001'. ''Archives of Sexual Behavior'' '''33''': 87–96.</ref>
 
Frequently, but not exclusively, this indicates acceptance of the feminist theory of human nature.
 
However, in many instances, the term ''gender'' still refers to sexual distinction generally without such an assumption.
 
*'''2004''': Among the reasons that working scientists have given me for choosing '''gender''' rather than sex in biological contexts are desires to signal sympathy with feminist goals, to use a more academic term, or to avoid the connotation of copulation.
 
:— D Haig, ''The Inexorable Rise of Gender and the Decline of Sex''
 
In fact, the ideological distinction between ''sex'' and ''gender'' is only fitfully observed.<ref name="haig" />
 
  
===The concept of gender in other languages===
+
Biological research of gender has explored such areas as: [[Intersex]] physicalities, [[gender identity]], [[gender role]]s, and [[sexual preference]]. Late twentieth century study focused on [[steroid|hormonal]] aspects of the biology of gender. With the successful mapping of the [[human genome]], early twenty-first century research started making progress in understanding the effects of [[gene regulation]] on the human [[brain]].
;German and Dutch
 
In English, both 'sex' and 'gender' can be used in contexts where they could not be substituted — ''sexual intercourse'', ''safe sex'', ''sex worker'', or on the other hand, ''grammatical gender''. Other languages, like German or Dutch, use the same word, ''Geschlecht'' or ''Geslacht'', to refer not only to biological sex, but social differences and grammatical gender as well, making a distinction between 'sex' and 'gender' difficult. In some contexts, German has adopted the English loanword ''Gender'' to achieve this distinction. Sometimes ''Geschlechtsidentität'' is used for 'gender' (although it literally means 'gender identity') and ''Geschlecht'' for 'sex'.
 
<!-- (translation of Judith Butler's ''Gender Trouble'') —>
 
More common is the use of modifiers: ''biologisches Geschlecht'' for 'sex', ''Geschlechtsidentität'' for 'gender identity' and ''Geschlechtsrolle'' for 'gender role', and so on.
 
;Swedish
 
In Swedish, 'gender' is translated with the linguistically cognate ''genus'', including sociological contexts, thus: ''Genusstudier'' (gender studies) and ''Genusvetenskap'' (gender science). 'Sex' in Swedish, however, only signifies sexual relations, and not the typical English dichotomy, a concept for which ''kön'' (also from [[Proto Indo-European|PIE]] ''g<sup>e</sup>n-'') is used. A common distinction is then made between ''kön'' (sex) and ''genus'' (gender), where the former refers only to biological sex. In earlier literature, and occasionally in non-academic contexts, Swedish uses the word ''könsroll'' (literally 'sex role', but contextually translated as 'gender role'). These terms can have the same or different meanings depending on the context.
 
  
==Sex==
+
It has long been known that there are [[correlation]]s between the biological sex of animals and their [[ethology|behavior]].<ref>Charles Darwin, ''On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life'' (London: John Murray, 1859).</ref> It has also long been known that [[human behavior]] is influenced by the brain.
[[Image:55542main maflies med.jpg|thumb|right|Male (left) and female fruit flies, ''D. melanogaster''. The female is determined by the presence of two X chromosomes.]]  
 
{{main|Biological sex}}
 
{{see also|Sexual dimorphism|Sex-determination systems|Sexual differentiation|Evolution of sex}}
 
Gender can refer to the biological condition of being male or female, or less commonly [[intersex]] or "[[third sex]]" as applied to humans, or [[hermaphroditic]], as applied to non-human animals and plants.{{Fact|date=June 2007}} In this sense, the term is a synonym for ''sex''{{Fact|date=June 2007}}, a word that has undergone a usage shift itself, having become a synonym for ''sexual intercourse''.
 
  
==Biology of gender==
+
The late twentieth century saw an explosion in [[technology]] capable of aiding gender research. Extensive advances were made in understanding sexual dimorphism in  animals, such as the effects of [[sex steroid|sex hormone]]s on rats. The early twenty-first century producing results concerning [[genetic programming|genetically programmed]] sexual dimorphism in rat brains, prior even to the influence of hormones on [[developmental biology|development]]. "Genes on the [[sex chromosome]]s can directly influence sexual dimorphism in [[cognition]] and behavior, [[Statistical independence|independent]] of the action of sex steroids."<ref>David H. Skuse, Sexual dimorphism in cognition and behavior: the role of X-linked genes, ''European Journal of Endocrinology'' (155): 99-106.</ref>
{{main|Biology of gender}}
 
{{See also|Gender taxonomy}}
 
{{Expand|date=June 2007}}
 
  
==Social category==
+
===Differences between genders===
{{main|Sociology of gender|Gender roles}}
+
[[File:Human body features.png|thumb|right|250 px|Male and female human Anatomy]]
 +
The brains of many animals, including humans, are [[statistical significance|significantly]] different for [[male]]s and [[female]]s of the [[species]].<ref>Robert W. Goy and Bruce S. McEwen, [https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/sexual-differentiation-brain Sexual Differentiation of the Brain: Based on a Work Session of the Neurosciences Research Program.] Retrieved December 22, 2020.</ref> Both [[gene]]s and [[hormone]]s affect the formation of many animal brains before "[[birth]]" (or [[hatching]]), and also behavior of adult individuals. Hormones significantly affect human brain formation, and also brain development at puberty. Both kinds of brain difference affect male and female behavior.
  
Since the 1950s, the term ''gender'' has been increasingly used to distinguish a social role ([[gender role]]) and/or personal identity ([[gender identity]]) distinct from biological sex. Sexologist [[John Money]] wrote in 1955, "[t]he term ''gender role'' is used to signify all those things that a person says or does to disclose himself or herself as having the status of boy or man, girl or woman, respectively. It includes, but is not restricted to, sexuality in the sense of eroticism."<ref name="eroticism">Money, J. (1955). "Hermaphroditism, gender and precocity in hyperadrenocorticism: Psychologic findings." ''Bulletin of the Johns Hopkins Hospital'' '''96''', 253–264.</ref> Elements of such a role include clothing, speech patterns, movement and other factors not solely limited to [[biological sex]].
+
Although men have a larger brain size, even when adjusted for body mass, there is no definite indication that men are more [[intelligence|intelligent]] than women. In contrast, women have a higher density of neurons in certain parts of the brain. Difference is seen in the ability to perform certain tasks. On average, women are superior on various measures of verbal ability, while men have specific abilities on measures of mathematical and spatial ability.
  
Many societies categorize all individuals as either [[male]] or [[female]]—however, this is not universal. Some societies recognise a [[third gender]]<ref name="third-gender">Herdt, Gilbert (ed.) (1996). ''Third Sex Third Gender: Beyond Sexual Dimorphism in Culture and History.'' ISBN 0-942299-82-5</ref>—for instance, the [[Two-Spirit]] people of some indigenous American peoples, and [[hijra (South Asia)|hijra]]s of India and Pakistan<ref name="hijras">Nanda, Serena (1998). ''Neither Man Nor Woman: The Hijras of India''. Wadsworth Publishing. ISBN 0-534-50903-7<br/>* Reddy, Gayatri (2005). ''With Respect to Sex: Negotiating Hijra Identity in South India.'' (Worlds of Desire: The Chicago Series on Sexuality, Gender, and Culture), University Of Chicago Press (July 1, 2005). ISBN 0-226-70756-3</ref>—or even a fourth<ref name="fourth">Roscoe, Will (2000). ''Changing Ones: Third and Fourth Genders in Native North America''. Palgrave Macmillan (June 17, 2000) ISBN 0-312-22479-6</ref> or fifth.<ref name="fifth">Graham, Sharyn (2001), [http://www.insideindonesia.org/edit66/bissu2.htm Sulawesi's fifth gender], Inside Indonesia, April-June 2001.</ref> Such categories may be an intermediate state between male and female, a state of sexlessness, or a distinct gender not dependent on male and female gender roles. [[Joan Roughgarden]] argues that in some non-human animal species, there can also be said to be more than two genders, in that there might be multiple templates for behavior available to individual organisms with a given biological sex.<ref name="roughgarden">Roughgarden, Joan. (2004) ''Evolution's Rainbow: Diversity, Gender, and Sexuality in Nature and People''. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-24073-1</ref>
+
[[Richard J. Haier]] and colleagues at the universities of [[University of New Mexico|New Mexico]] and [[University of California, Irvine|California (Irvine)]] found, using [[brain mapping]], that men have more than six times the amount of [[gray matter]] related to general intelligence than women, and women have nearly ten times the amount of [[white matter]] related to intelligence than men.<ref> Richard J. Haier, Rex E. Jung, Ronald A. Yeo, Kevin Head, and Michael T. Alkire, [https://static1.squarespace.com/static/538634aee4b0b15c0516a524/t/53877625e4b09ebc9e391ffb/1401386533562/structural-brain-variation-and-general-intelligence.pdf Structural Brain Variation and General Intelligence,] ''NeuroImage'' 23 (2004): 425–433. Retrieved December 22, 2020.</ref> "These findings suggest that human evolution has created two different types of brains designed for equally intelligent behavior," according to Haier. Gray matter is used for information processing, while white matter consists of the connections between processing centers.
  
There is debate over to what extent gender is a [[social construct]] and to what extent it is a biological construct. One point of view in the debate is [[social constructionism]], which suggests that gender is entirely a social construct. Contrary to social constructionism is [[essentialism]] which suggests that it is entirely a biological construct. Others' opinions on the subject lie somewhere in between.
+
[[Image:Father with child.jpg|thumb|240px|right|Father with child.]]
 +
[[Image:Mothers and children I.jpg|thumb|left|200 px|Mother and new baby.]]
 +
It has also been demonstrated that brain processing responds to the external environment. [[Learning]], both of ideas and behaviors, appears to be coded in brain processes. It also appears that in several simplified cases this coding operates differently, but in some ways equivalently, in the brains of men and women. "Even when men and women do the same chores equally well, they may use different brain circuits to get the same result."<ref>Linda Marsha, [https://www.discovermagazine.com/mind/he-thinks-she-thinks He Thinks, She Thinks,] ''Discover'', July 5, 2007. Retrieved December 22, 2020.</ref> For example, both men and women learn and use [[language]]; however, [[Biochemistry|bio-chemically]], they appear to process it differently. Differences in male and female use of language are likely reflections ''both'' of biological preferences and aptitudes ''and'' of learned patterns.
  
Some gender associations are changing as society changes, yet much controversy exists over the extent to which [[gender role]]s are simply [[stereotypes]], arbitrary [[social construction]]s, or natural innate differences.
+
Biological influences on gender are present in the act of sexual intercourse itself, along with the resulting [[pregnancy]] in which women must carry the unborn child for nine months. Following the birth of the child, mothers also have the physical connection of breast-feeding. These are seen as the roots of one difference in [[attitude]]s and actions by gender. These roots grow to take the form of different child rearing roles and can be seen as an influence on the concept of gender overall.
  
===In feminist and gender theory===
+
==Social concepts of gender==
{{main|Feminist theory|Gender studies}}
+
[[Image:WomanFactory1940s.jpg|thumb|left|250 px|Freedom from traditional U.S. female [[gender role]]s during [[World War II|WWII]].]]
 +
Since the 1950s, the term "gender" has been increasingly used to distinguish a social role ([[gender role]]) and/or personal [[identity]] ([[gender identity]]) distinct from biological sex. Sexologist [[John Money]] wrote in 1955, "[t]he term ''gender role'' is used to signify all those things that a person says or does to disclose himself or herself as having the status of boy or man, girl or woman, respectively. It includes, but is not restricted to, sexuality in the sense of eroticism."<ref>J. Money, "Hermaphroditism, gender and precocity in hyperadrenocorticism: Psychologic findings," ''Bulletin of the Johns Hopkins Hospital'' 96: 253–264.</ref> Elements of such a role include clothing, speech patterns, movement and other factors not solely limited to [[biological sex]].
 +
[[Image:Catlin - Dance to the berdache2.jpg|thumb|250 px|Detail of ''Dance to the Berdache,'' painted by [[George Catlin]].]]
 +
Many societies categorize all individuals as either [[male]] or [[female]]—however, this is not universal. Some societies recognize a [[third gender]];<ref>Gilbert Herdt (ed.), ''Third Sex Third Gender: Beyond Sexual Dimorphism in Culture and History'' (Zone Books, 1996, ISBN 0942299825).</ref> for instance, the [[Two-Spirit]] people of some indigenous American peoples, and [[hijra (South Asia)|hijra]]s of India and Pakistan;<ref>Serena Nanda, ''Neither Man Nor Woman: The Hijras of India'' (Wadsworth Publishing, 1998, ISBN 0534509037).</ref> or even a fourth<ref>Will Roscoe, ''Changing Ones: Third and Fourth Genders in Native North America'' (Palgrave Macmillan, 2000, ISBN 0312224796).</ref> or fifth.<ref>Sharyn Graham, Sulawesi's fifth gender ''Inside Indonesia'', July 30, 2007.</ref> Such categories may be an intermediate state between male and female, a state of sexlessness, or a distinct gender not dependent on male and female gender roles. In some cultures, such gender identities are referred to as "non-binary." [[Joan Roughgarden]] argued that in some non-human animal species, there can also be said to be more than two genders, in that there might be multiple templates for behavior available to individual organisms with a given biological sex.<ref>Joan Roughgarden, ''Evolution's Rainbow: Diversity, Gender, and Sexuality in Nature and People'' (University of California Press, 2004, ISBN 0520240731).</ref>
  
During the 1970s there was no consensus about how the terms were to be applied. In the 1974 edition of ''[[Masculine/Feminine or Human]]'', the author uses "[[innate]] gender" and "learned [[sex roles]]," but in the 1978 edition, the use of ''sex'' and ''gender'' is reversed. By 1980, most [[feminist]] writings had agreed on using ''gender'' only for socioculturally adapted [[trait]]s.
+
Some gender associations are changing as society changes, yet much controversy exists over the extent to which gender roles are simply [[stereotype]]s, arbitrary [[social construction]]s, or natural innate differences.
  
The philosopher and feminist [[Simone de Beauvoir]] applied [[existentialism]] to women's experience of life: "One is not born a woman, one becomes one."<ref name="de Beauvoir">de Beauvoir, S. (1949, 1989) "The Second Sex."</ref> In Gender Studies the term ''gender'' is used to refer to proposed [[social construct|social and cultural constructions]] of masculinities and femininities. In this context, ''gender'' explicitly excludes reference biological differences, to focus on cultural differences.<ref name="Stephanie Garrett">Garrett, S. (1992). "Gender," p. vii.</ref> This emerged from a number of different areas: in sociology during the 1950s (see [[Sociology of gender]]); from the theories of the psychoanalyst [[Lacan#Lacan and his discontents|Jaques Lacan]]; and in the work of feminists (such as [[Judith Butler]]). Each field came to regard "gender" as a practice, sometimes referred to as "[[performative]]."<ref name="performativity of gender">Butler, J. (1999). "Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity," 9.</ref>
+
There has been significant debate over to what extent gender is a [[social construct]] and to what extent it is a biological construct. One point of view in the debate is [[social constructionism]], which suggests that gender is entirely a social construct. Contrary to social constructionism is [[essentialism]], which suggests that it is entirely a biological construct. Other opinions on the subject lie somewhere in between.
  
=== Gender and development ===
+
===Feminism and gender===
{{main|Gender identity}}
+
[[Feminism|Feminists]] take different views on gender, mainly in three camps. The first camp embraces [[gender role]]s, focusing on the biological differences between sexes and emphasizing the roles that result. This school takes the view that women are natural [[child]] caretakers as a result of their biological function of childbirth and breast-feeding. The second camp acknowledges that the sexes may have different natural strengths, but fights for equal treatment of both genders rather than only valuing the strengths traditionally found in males. The third camp of feminists argues that the concept of gender should be abolished as no one lives up to the prototype of either sex, therefore gender norms create unhealthy ideal genders impossible to meet by anyone.
  
Gender, and particularly the role of [[women]] is widely recognized as vitally important to [[international development]] issues. This often means a focus on gender-equality, ensuring [[participation (decision making)|participation]], but includes an understanding of the different roles and expectation of the genders within the community.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
+
==Gender in law==
 +
Gender has had a diverse impact in [[law]]. Beginning from the birth of a child, one can look at the leave of absence offered to parents of new-born children. Traditionally women have been offered a much longer maternity leave than the father of the child is allowed to take as paternity leave. Similarly, if these parents were to be [[divorce]]d, many legal systems have given priority for custody to the mothers. Also, divorced mothers have tended to receive more benefits in [[child support]] than divorced fathers.  
  
As well as directly addressing inequality, attention to gender issues is regarded as important to the success of development programs, for all participants. For example, in [[microfinance]] it is common to target women, as besides the fact that women tend to be over-represented in the poorest segments of the population, they are also regarded as more reliable at repaying the loans.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} Also, it is claimed that women are more likely to use the money for the benefit of their families.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
+
From the point of view of the child, the [[education]] received by children has been divided into all girls or all boys [[school]]s in many cultures. Participation in sports has long been subject to gender bias. In this arena, males have a long history of being favored. It was not until the 1970s, when actions such as Title IX of the U.S. "Education Amendment" came about mandating equal funding for women's sports, that women had equal opportunity to engage in sports.  
  
Some organizations working in developing countries and in the development field have incorporated advocacy and empowerment for women into their work. A notable example is [[Wangari Maathai]]'s environmental organization, the [[Green Belt Movement]].
+
For adults, there are many legal implications of one's gender. A person's sex as female or male has legal significance throughout one's life—sex is indicated on government documents, and laws provide differently for women and men. For example, the [[prison]] to which criminals are sent, or the housing within any government run institution, varies by their perceived gender; many [[pension]] systems have different retirement ages for men and women, and usually [[marriage]] is only available to opposite-gender couples.
  
===Legal status===
+
The question then arises as to what legally determines whether someone is male or female. In most cases, this can appear obvious, but the matter is complicated for [[intersexual]] or [[transgender]] people. Different jurisdictions have adopted different answers to this question. Almost all countries permit changes of legal gender status in cases of intersexualism, when the gender assignment made at birth is determined upon further investigation to be biologically inaccurate—technically, however, this is not a change of status ''per se.'' Rather, it is recognition of a status which was deemed to exist unknown from birth. Increasingly, jurisdictions also provide a procedure for changes of legal gender for transgender people.
  
A person's sex as female or male has legal significance—sex is indicated on government documents, and laws provide differently for women and men. Some examples of how sex and gender are legally relevant: many pension systems have different retirement ages for men or women, and usually marriage is only available to opposite-gender couples, whereas a civil partnership is often only available for same-sex couples.
+
[[Sex assignment|Gender assignment]], when there are any indications that genital sex might not be decisive in a particular case, is normally not defined by any single definition, but by a combination of conditions, including [[chromosome]]s and [[gonad]]s. Thus, for example, in many jurisdictions a person with XY chromosomes but female gonads could be recognized as female at birth.
  
The question then arises as to what legally determines whether someone is male or female. In most cases this can appear obvious, but the matter is complicated for [[intersexual]] or [[transgender]] people. Different jurisdictions have adopted different answers to this question. Almost all countries permit changes of legal gender status in cases of intersexualism, when the gender assignment made at birth is determined upon further investigation to be biologically inaccurate—technically, however, this is not a change of status ''per se.'' Rather, it is recognition of a status which was deemed to exist unknown from birth. Increasingly, jurisdictions also provide a procedure for changes of legal gender for transgender people.
+
The ability to change legal gender for transgender people in particular has given rise to the phenomena in some jurisdictions of the same person having different genders for the purposes of different areas of the law. For example, in [[Australia]] prior to the Re Kevin decisions, a transsexual person could be recognized as the gender they identified with under many areas of the law, such as social security law, but not for the law of marriage. Thus, for a period it was possible for the same person to have two different genders under Australian law. It is also possible in federal systems for the same person to have one gender under state law and a different gender under federal law (if the state recognizes gender transitions, but the federal government does not).
  
[[Sex assignment|Gender assignment]], when there are any indications that genital sex might not be decisive in a particular case, is normally not defined by any single definition, but by a combination of conditions, including chromosomes and gonads. Thus, for example, in many jurisdictions a person with XY chromosomes but female gonads could be recognised as female at birth.
+
==Gender in religion==
 +
[[Image:Yin yang.svg|thumb|225px|[[Yin and yang|''yin'' and ''yang'']]]]
 +
In [[Taoism]], [[yin and yang]] are considered feminine and masculine, respectively.
  
The ability to [[Legal aspects of transsexualism|change legal gender]] for transgender people in particular has given rise to the phenomena in some jurisdictions of the same person having different genders for the purposes of different areas of the law. For example, in Australia prior to the Re Kevin decisions, a transsexual person could be recognised as the gender they identified with under many areas of the law, e.g., social security law, but not for the law of marriage. Thus, for a period it was possible for the same person to have two different genders under Australian law.
+
In [[Christianity]], [[God]] is described in masculine terms; however, the [[Church]] has historically been described in feminine terms.
  
It is also possible in federal systems for the same person to have one gender under state law and a different gender under federal law (e.g., suppose the state recognises gender transitions, but the federal government does not).
+
Of one of the several forms of the [[Hindu]] God, [[Shiva]], is [[Ardhanarishwar]] (literally half-female God). Here Shiva manifests himself so that the left half is Female and the right half is Male. The left represents Shakti (energy, power) in the form of Goddess Parvati (otherwise his consort) and the right half Shiva. Whereas Parvati is the cause of arousal of Kama (desires), Shiva is the killer. Shiva is pervaded by the power of Parvati and Parvati is pervaded by the power of Shiva.  
  
==Spirituality==
+
While the stone images may seem to represent a half-male and half-female God, the true symbolic representation is of a being the whole of which is Shiva and the whole of which is Shakti at the same time. It is a 3-D representation of only shakti from one angle and only Shiva from the other. Shiva and Shakti are hence the same being representing a collective of Jnana (knowledge) and Kriya (activity).
In [[Taoism]], [[yin and yang]] are considered feminine and masculine, respectively.
 
  
In [[Christianity]], God is described in masculine terms; however, the Church has historically been described in feminine terms.
+
Adi Shankaracharya, the founder of non-dualistic philosophy (Advaita–"not two") in Hindu thought says in his "Saundaryalahari"—''Shivah Shaktayaa yukto yadi bhavati shaktah prabhavitum na che devum devona khalu kushalah spanditam api'' It is only when Shiva is united with Shakti that He acquires the capability of becoming the Lord of the Universe. In the absence of Shakti, He is not even able to stir. In fact, the term "Shiva" originated from "Shva," which implies a dead body. It is only through his inherent shakti that Shiva realizes his true nature.
  
Of one of the several forms of the Hindu God, Shiva, is Ardhanarishwar (literally half-female God). Here Shiva manifests himself so that the left half is Female and the right half is Male. The left represents Shakti (energy, power) in the form of Goddess Parvati (otherwise his consort) and the right half Shiva. Whereas Parvati is the cause of arousal of Kama (desires), Shiva is the killer. Shiva is pervaded by the power of Parvati and Parvati is pervaded by the power of Shiva.  
+
This mythology projects the inherent view in ancient Hinduism, that each human carries within himself both male and female components, which are forces rather than sexes, and it is the harmony between the creative and the annihilative, the strong and the soft, the proactive and the passive, that makes a true person. Such thought obliterates any material distinction between the male and female altogether. This may explain why in ancient India evidence is found of homosexuality, bisexuality, androgyny, multiple sex partners, and open representation of sexual pleasures in artworks like the Khajuraho temples, being accepted within prevalent social frameworks.<ref>Ashok Vohra, "The Male-Female Hologram," ''Times of India,'' March 8, 2005, Page 9.</ref>
While the stone images may seem to represent a half-male and half-female God, the true symbolic representation is of a being the whole of which is Shiva and the whole of which is Shakti at the same time. It is a 3-D representation of only shakti from one angle and only Shiva from the other. Shiva and Shakti are hence the same being representing a collective of Jnana (knowledge) and Kriya (activity).
 
Adi Shankaracharya, the founder of non-dualistic philosophy (Advaita–"not two") in Hindu thought says in his "Saundaryalahari"—''Shivah Shaktayaa yukto yadi bhavati shaktah prabhavitum na che devum devona khalu kushalah spanditam api'' " i.e., It is only when Shiva is united with Shakti that He acquires the capability of becoming the Lord of the Universe. In the absence of Shakti, He is not even able to stir. In fact, the term "Shiva" originated from "Shva," which implies a dead body. It is only through his inherent shakti that Shiva realizes his true nature.
 
  
This mythology projects the inherent view in ancient Hinduism, that each human carries within himself both male and female components, which are forces rather than sexes, and it is the harmony between the creative and the annihilative, the strong and the soft, the proactive and the passive, that makes a true person. Such thought, leave alone entail gender equality, in fact obliterates any material distinction between the male and female altogether. This may explain why in ancient India we find evidence of homosexuality, bisexuality, androgyny, multiple sex partners and open representation of sexual pleasures in artworks like the Khajuraho temples, being accepted within prevalent social frameworks.<ref name="vohra">"The Male-Female Hologram," Ashok Vohra, [[Times of India]], [[March 8]], [[2005]], Page 9</ref>
+
==Gender in other contexts==
 +
The word "gender" is used in several contexts to describe binary differences, more or less loosely associated by analogy with various actual or perceived differences between men and women.
  
==Language==
+
===Language===
===Connectors and fasteners===
+
Natural [[language]]s often make gender distinctions. These may be of various kinds:
{{main|Gender of connectors and fasteners}}
 
  
<!-- merged from full article —>In [[electrical]] and [[Mechanics|mechanical]] trades and manufacturing, and in [[electronics]], each of a pair of mating [[Electrical connector|connectors]] or [[fastener]]s (such as [[Nut (hardware)|nut]]s and [[screw|bolt]]s) is conventionally assigned the designation ''male'' or ''female''. The assignment is by direct [[analogy]] with animal [[genitalia]]; the part bearing one or more protrusions, or which fits inside the other, being designated male and the part containing the corresponding indentations or fitting outside the other being female.  
+
* [[Grammatical gender]], a property of some languages in which every [[noun]] is assigned a gender, often with no direct relation to its meaning. For example, [[Spanish language|Spanish]] ''muchacha'' (grammatically feminine), [[German language|German]] ''Mädchen'' (grammatically neuter), and [[Irish language|Irish]] ''cailín'' (grammatically masculine) all mean "girl." The terms "masculine" and "feminine" are generally preferred to "male" and "female" in reference to grammatical gender.
 +
* The traditional use of different vocabulary by men and women. For instance, there are differences in spoken Japanese depending on whether the speaker is male or female.
 +
* The asymmetrical use of terms that refer to males and females. Concern that current language may be biased in favor of males has led some authors in recent times to argue for the use of more [[Gender-neutral language in English]] and other languages.
  
[[Image:F plug.jpg|thumb|right|250px|An electrical power male plug, left, and matching female socket, of a type common in many European countries.]]
+
===Connectors and fasteners===
 +
[[File:C plug.jpg|thumb|right|250px|An electrical power male plug, left, and matching female socket.]]
 +
In [[electricity|electrical]] and [[Mechanics|mechanical]] trades and manufacturing, and in [[electronics]], each of a pair of mating [[Electrical connector|connectors]] or [[fastener]]s (such as [[Nut (hardware)|nut]]s and [[screw|bolt]]s) is conventionally assigned the designation "male" or "female." The assignment is by direct [[analogy]] with animal [[genitalia]]; the part bearing one or more protrusions, or which fits inside the other, being designated male and the part containing the corresponding indentations or fitting outside the other being female.
  
 
===Music===
 
===Music===
In western music theory, keys, chords and scales are often described as having ''major'' or ''minor'' tonality, sometimes related to ''masculine'' and ''feminine''. {{Fact|date=February 2007}} By analogy, the ''major'' scales are masculine (clear, open, extroverted), while the minor scales are given feminine qualities (dark, soft, introverted). German uses the word ''Tongeschlecht'' ("Tone gender") for tonality, and the words ''Dur'' (from Latin ''durus'', hard) for ''major'' and ''moll'' (from Latin ''mollis'', soft) for ''minor''.
+
In western [[music]] theory, keys, [[chord]]s, and [[musical scale|scale]]s are often described as having "major" or "minor" [[tonality]], sometimes related to "masculine" and "feminine." By analogy, the "major" scales are masculine (clear, open, extroverted), while the minor scales are given feminine qualities (dark, soft, introverted). Reflecting this connection to gender, German uses the word ''Tongeschlecht'' ("Tone gender") for tonality, and the words ''Dur'' (from Latin ''durus'', hard) for ''major'' and ''moll'' (from Latin ''mollis'', soft) for ''minor''.
:''See'' [[Major and minor]].
 
 
 
===Linguistics===
 
Natural languages often make gender distinctions. These may be of various kinds:
 
  
* [[Grammatical gender]], a property of some languages in which every [[noun]] is assigned a gender, often with no direct relation to its meaning. For example, [[Spanish language|Spanish]] ''muchacha'' (grammatically feminine), [[German language|German]] ''Mädchen'' (grammatically neuter), and [[Irish language|Irish]] ''cailín'' (grammatically masculine) all mean "girl". The terms "masculine" and "feminine" are generally preferred to "male" and "female" in reference to grammatical gender.
+
==Notes==
* The traditional use of different vocabulary by men and women. See, for instance, [[Gender differences in spoken Japanese]].
+
<references/>
* The  asymmetrical use of terms that refer to males and females. Concern that current language may be biased in favor of males has led some authors in recent times to argue for the use of more [[Gender-neutral language in English]] and other languages.
 
==See also==
 
*[[Androcentrism]]
 
*[[Androgyny]]
 
*[[Biology of gender]]
 
*[[Femininity]]
 
*[[Gender bender]]
 
*[[Gender differences]]
 
*[[Gender studies]]
 
*[[Genderqueer]]
 
*[[List of gender names]]
 
*[[Masculinity]]
 
*[[Postgenderism]]
 
*[[Sexism]]
 
*[[Transgender]]
 
*[[Two-Spirit]]
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
{{reflist|2}}
+
* Baron-Cohen, Simon. ''The Essential Difference: The Truth about the Male and Female Brain''. Basic Books, 2003. ISBN 046500556X.
 
+
* Brizendine, Louann. ''The Female Brain''. New York: Morgan Road Books, 2006. ISBN 0767920100.
==Further reading==
+
* Brown, Donald E. ''Human Universals''. Temple University Press, 1991. ISBN 0877228418.
* Chafetz, J. S. ''Masculine/feminine or human? An overview of the sociology of sex roles''. 1st ed. 1974, 2nd ed. 178. Itasca, IL: F. E. Peacock.
+
* Chafetz, J. S. ''Masculine/feminine or human? An Overview of the Sociology of Sex Roles''. Itasca, IL: F. E. Peacock, 1978.  ISBN 0875812317.
 
+
*Darwin, Charles. ''On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life''. London: John Murray, 1859.
 
+
* Herdt, Gilbert (ed.). ''Third Sex Third Gender: Beyond Sexual Dimorphism in Culture and History.'' Zone Books, 1996. ISBN 0942299825.
==External links==
+
* Kimura, Doreen. ''Sex and Cognition''. MIT Press, 2000. ISBN 0262611640.
*[http://www.intellinate.com/science/social-sciences/psychology/childrens-gender-beliefs.html Children's Gender Beliefs]
+
* Moir, Anne, and David Jessel. ''Brain Sex: The Real Difference Between Men and Women''. Delta, 1992. ISBN 0385311834.
*[http://www.gendercide.org Gendercide Watch]: a project of the [[Gender Issues Education Foundation]] (GIEF), a registered charitable foundation based in [[Edmonton]], [[Alberta]]
+
* Nanda, Serena. ''Neither Man Nor Woman: The Hijras of India.'' Wadsworth Publishing, 1998. ISBN 0534509037.
*[http://moodle.ed.uiuc.edu/wiked/index.php/Gender_Differences WikEd—Gender Differences]
+
* Pinker, Steven. ''The Blank Slate: A Modern Denial of Human Nature''. London: Penguin Books, 2002. ISBN 0142003344.
*[http://moodle.ed.uiuc.edu/wiked/index.php/Gender_Inequities_in_the_Classroom WikEd—Gender Inequities in the Classroom]
+
* Reddy, Gayatri. ''With Respect to Sex: Negotiating Hijra Identity in South India.'' University Of Chicago Press, 2005. ISBN 0226707563.
*[http://www.randomhouse.com/wotd/index.pperl?date=19980612 'gender'] ''The Maven's Word of the Day'' June 12, 1998.
+
* Roscoe, Will. ''Changing Ones: Third and Fourth Genders in Native North America.'' Palgrave Macmillan, 2000. ISBN 0312224796.
=== Links on gender and development ===
+
* Roughgarden, Joan. ''Evolution's Rainbow: Diversity, Gender, and Sexuality in Nature and People.'' University of California Press, 2004. ISBN 0520240735.
*[http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/TOPICS/EXTGENDER/0,,menuPK:336874~pagePK:149018~piPK:149093~theSitePK:336868,00.html Gender Equality as Smart Economics - A New World Bank Group Action Plan], at the [[World Bank]] "Gender and Development" site.
 
*[http://www.undp.org/hiv/publications/gender/gendere.htm Gender, Development and the HIV Epidemic], at the [[UNDP]] site.
 
*[http://topics.developmentgateway.org/gender Gender, Poverty and Development]
 
*[http://us.oneworld.net/section/us/perspectives/gendermatters Perspectives: Gender Matters]—OneWorld.net's living magazine.
 
 
 
 
 
  
 +
== External links ==
 +
All links retrieved April 18, 2024.
  
 +
* Kritz, Francesca Lunzer. [https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/12/15/AR2006121501879.html 'Not Feeling Each Other's Pain:] Men and Women Hurt Differently—and Some of The Difference May Really Be in Their Heads'. ''The Washington Post,'' December 19, 2006. Page HE01.
 +
* Pinker vs. Spelke. [http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/debate05/debate05_index.html 'The Science of Gender and Science'.] ''Edge'' (The Third Culture) May 16, 2005. (multimedia record of public debate)
 +
*[http://www.intellinate.com/science/social-sciences/psychology/childrens-gender-beliefs.html Children’s Gender Beliefs: A Review of Past Research Exploring A Variety of Variables]
 +
*[https://www.who.int/health-topics/gender#tab=tab_1 Gender and health] ''WHO''
 +
*[https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/232363#gender-differences Sex and gender: What is the difference?] ''Medical News Today''
 +
*[https://www.healthline.com/health/sex-vs-gender#gender What’s the Difference Between Sex and Gender?] ''Healthline''
  
{{Credits|Gender|157015622|}}
+
{{Credits|Gender|157015622|Biology_of_gender|157218815}}

Latest revision as of 06:41, 18 April 2024


The gender symbols used to denote a female (left) or male (right) organism, derived from the astrological symbols of Venus and Mars.

Gender traditionally refers to the differences between men and women. More recently, it has also referred to an individual's self perception of being male or female. Within the academic fields of cultural studies, gender studies, and the social sciences "gender" is used interchangeably both regarding "sex," and "identity," and is often used to described a gender role.

Gender roles traditionally were often divided into distinct feminine and masculine roles until the late twentieth century, when many jobs in both industrial and information-age societies could be performed by both males and females. In many modern societies gender no longer determines the work or household functions that an individual can perform, allowing greater equality for all people to compete in the workplace and earn a livable wage.

In recent years, many societies have recognized same sex marriages in which partners may or may not identify with specific gender roles. This can be important for legal purposes related to health benefits and estate inheritance for committed partnerships. However, biologically, it is only biological females who are capable of bearing children. Thus there is continued confusion about sex and gender roles related to marriage and sexual love in the structure of families. Rather than describing a loving partnership between individuals as marriage, marriage as a social institution was traditionally related to raising children and establishing stable, peaceful, and happy societies. This can be confusing as it is often unclear whether laws concerning marriage are for the purpose of human partnerships or child-raising social institutions.

Etymology and usage

The word gender comes from the Middle English gendre, a loanword from Norman-conquest-era Middle French. This, in turn, came from Latin genus. Both words mean "kind," "type," or "sort." They derive ultimately from a widely attested Proto-Indo-European (PIE) root gen-.[1]

In English, both "sex" and "gender" are used in contexts where they cannot be substituted—"sexual intercourse," "safe sex," "sex worker," or on the other hand, "grammatical gender." Other languages, like German or Dutch, use the same word, Geschlecht or Geslacht, to refer not only to biological sex, but social differences and grammatical gender as well, making a distinction between 'sex' and 'gender' difficult. In some contexts, German has adopted the English loanword Gender to achieve this distinction. Sometimes Geschlechtsidentität is used for "gender" (although it literally means "gender identity") and Geschlecht for "sex."

Biological concept of gender

Gender can refer to the biological condition of being male or female, or less commonly intersex or "third sex" as applied to humans, or hermaphroditic, as applied to non-human animals and plants.

Male-Female Differences

The biology of gender is scientific analysis of the physical basis for behavioral differences between men and women. It is more specific than sexual dimorphism, which covers physical and behavioral differences between males and females of any sexually reproducing species, or sexual differentiation, where physical and behavioral differences between men and women are described.

Biological research of gender has explored such areas as: Intersex physicalities, gender identity, gender roles, and sexual preference. Late twentieth century study focused on hormonal aspects of the biology of gender. With the successful mapping of the human genome, early twenty-first century research started making progress in understanding the effects of gene regulation on the human brain.

It has long been known that there are correlations between the biological sex of animals and their behavior.[2] It has also long been known that human behavior is influenced by the brain.

The late twentieth century saw an explosion in technology capable of aiding gender research. Extensive advances were made in understanding sexual dimorphism in animals, such as the effects of sex hormones on rats. The early twenty-first century producing results concerning genetically programmed sexual dimorphism in rat brains, prior even to the influence of hormones on development. "Genes on the sex chromosomes can directly influence sexual dimorphism in cognition and behavior, independent of the action of sex steroids."[3]

Differences between genders

Male and female human Anatomy

The brains of many animals, including humans, are significantly different for males and females of the species.[4] Both genes and hormones affect the formation of many animal brains before "birth" (or hatching), and also behavior of adult individuals. Hormones significantly affect human brain formation, and also brain development at puberty. Both kinds of brain difference affect male and female behavior.

Although men have a larger brain size, even when adjusted for body mass, there is no definite indication that men are more intelligent than women. In contrast, women have a higher density of neurons in certain parts of the brain. Difference is seen in the ability to perform certain tasks. On average, women are superior on various measures of verbal ability, while men have specific abilities on measures of mathematical and spatial ability.

Richard J. Haier and colleagues at the universities of New Mexico and California (Irvine) found, using brain mapping, that men have more than six times the amount of gray matter related to general intelligence than women, and women have nearly ten times the amount of white matter related to intelligence than men.[5] "These findings suggest that human evolution has created two different types of brains designed for equally intelligent behavior," according to Haier. Gray matter is used for information processing, while white matter consists of the connections between processing centers.

Father with child.
Mother and new baby.

It has also been demonstrated that brain processing responds to the external environment. Learning, both of ideas and behaviors, appears to be coded in brain processes. It also appears that in several simplified cases this coding operates differently, but in some ways equivalently, in the brains of men and women. "Even when men and women do the same chores equally well, they may use different brain circuits to get the same result."[6] For example, both men and women learn and use language; however, bio-chemically, they appear to process it differently. Differences in male and female use of language are likely reflections both of biological preferences and aptitudes and of learned patterns.

Biological influences on gender are present in the act of sexual intercourse itself, along with the resulting pregnancy in which women must carry the unborn child for nine months. Following the birth of the child, mothers also have the physical connection of breast-feeding. These are seen as the roots of one difference in attitudes and actions by gender. These roots grow to take the form of different child rearing roles and can be seen as an influence on the concept of gender overall.

Social concepts of gender

Freedom from traditional U.S. female gender roles during WWII.

Since the 1950s, the term "gender" has been increasingly used to distinguish a social role (gender role) and/or personal identity (gender identity) distinct from biological sex. Sexologist John Money wrote in 1955, "[t]he term gender role is used to signify all those things that a person says or does to disclose himself or herself as having the status of boy or man, girl or woman, respectively. It includes, but is not restricted to, sexuality in the sense of eroticism."[7] Elements of such a role include clothing, speech patterns, movement and other factors not solely limited to biological sex.

Detail of Dance to the Berdache, painted by George Catlin.

Many societies categorize all individuals as either male or female—however, this is not universal. Some societies recognize a third gender;[8] for instance, the Two-Spirit people of some indigenous American peoples, and hijras of India and Pakistan;[9] or even a fourth[10] or fifth.[11] Such categories may be an intermediate state between male and female, a state of sexlessness, or a distinct gender not dependent on male and female gender roles. In some cultures, such gender identities are referred to as "non-binary." Joan Roughgarden argued that in some non-human animal species, there can also be said to be more than two genders, in that there might be multiple templates for behavior available to individual organisms with a given biological sex.[12]

Some gender associations are changing as society changes, yet much controversy exists over the extent to which gender roles are simply stereotypes, arbitrary social constructions, or natural innate differences.

There has been significant debate over to what extent gender is a social construct and to what extent it is a biological construct. One point of view in the debate is social constructionism, which suggests that gender is entirely a social construct. Contrary to social constructionism is essentialism, which suggests that it is entirely a biological construct. Other opinions on the subject lie somewhere in between.

Feminism and gender

Feminists take different views on gender, mainly in three camps. The first camp embraces gender roles, focusing on the biological differences between sexes and emphasizing the roles that result. This school takes the view that women are natural child caretakers as a result of their biological function of childbirth and breast-feeding. The second camp acknowledges that the sexes may have different natural strengths, but fights for equal treatment of both genders rather than only valuing the strengths traditionally found in males. The third camp of feminists argues that the concept of gender should be abolished as no one lives up to the prototype of either sex, therefore gender norms create unhealthy ideal genders impossible to meet by anyone.

Gender in law

Gender has had a diverse impact in law. Beginning from the birth of a child, one can look at the leave of absence offered to parents of new-born children. Traditionally women have been offered a much longer maternity leave than the father of the child is allowed to take as paternity leave. Similarly, if these parents were to be divorced, many legal systems have given priority for custody to the mothers. Also, divorced mothers have tended to receive more benefits in child support than divorced fathers.

From the point of view of the child, the education received by children has been divided into all girls or all boys schools in many cultures. Participation in sports has long been subject to gender bias. In this arena, males have a long history of being favored. It was not until the 1970s, when actions such as Title IX of the U.S. "Education Amendment" came about mandating equal funding for women's sports, that women had equal opportunity to engage in sports.

For adults, there are many legal implications of one's gender. A person's sex as female or male has legal significance throughout one's life—sex is indicated on government documents, and laws provide differently for women and men. For example, the prison to which criminals are sent, or the housing within any government run institution, varies by their perceived gender; many pension systems have different retirement ages for men and women, and usually marriage is only available to opposite-gender couples.

The question then arises as to what legally determines whether someone is male or female. In most cases, this can appear obvious, but the matter is complicated for intersexual or transgender people. Different jurisdictions have adopted different answers to this question. Almost all countries permit changes of legal gender status in cases of intersexualism, when the gender assignment made at birth is determined upon further investigation to be biologically inaccurate—technically, however, this is not a change of status per se. Rather, it is recognition of a status which was deemed to exist unknown from birth. Increasingly, jurisdictions also provide a procedure for changes of legal gender for transgender people.

Gender assignment, when there are any indications that genital sex might not be decisive in a particular case, is normally not defined by any single definition, but by a combination of conditions, including chromosomes and gonads. Thus, for example, in many jurisdictions a person with XY chromosomes but female gonads could be recognized as female at birth.

The ability to change legal gender for transgender people in particular has given rise to the phenomena in some jurisdictions of the same person having different genders for the purposes of different areas of the law. For example, in Australia prior to the Re Kevin decisions, a transsexual person could be recognized as the gender they identified with under many areas of the law, such as social security law, but not for the law of marriage. Thus, for a period it was possible for the same person to have two different genders under Australian law. It is also possible in federal systems for the same person to have one gender under state law and a different gender under federal law (if the state recognizes gender transitions, but the federal government does not).

Gender in religion

In Taoism, yin and yang are considered feminine and masculine, respectively.

In Christianity, God is described in masculine terms; however, the Church has historically been described in feminine terms.

Of one of the several forms of the Hindu God, Shiva, is Ardhanarishwar (literally half-female God). Here Shiva manifests himself so that the left half is Female and the right half is Male. The left represents Shakti (energy, power) in the form of Goddess Parvati (otherwise his consort) and the right half Shiva. Whereas Parvati is the cause of arousal of Kama (desires), Shiva is the killer. Shiva is pervaded by the power of Parvati and Parvati is pervaded by the power of Shiva.

While the stone images may seem to represent a half-male and half-female God, the true symbolic representation is of a being the whole of which is Shiva and the whole of which is Shakti at the same time. It is a 3-D representation of only shakti from one angle and only Shiva from the other. Shiva and Shakti are hence the same being representing a collective of Jnana (knowledge) and Kriya (activity).

Adi Shankaracharya, the founder of non-dualistic philosophy (Advaita–"not two") in Hindu thought says in his "Saundaryalahari"—Shivah Shaktayaa yukto yadi bhavati shaktah prabhavitum na che devum devona khalu kushalah spanditam api It is only when Shiva is united with Shakti that He acquires the capability of becoming the Lord of the Universe. In the absence of Shakti, He is not even able to stir. In fact, the term "Shiva" originated from "Shva," which implies a dead body. It is only through his inherent shakti that Shiva realizes his true nature.

This mythology projects the inherent view in ancient Hinduism, that each human carries within himself both male and female components, which are forces rather than sexes, and it is the harmony between the creative and the annihilative, the strong and the soft, the proactive and the passive, that makes a true person. Such thought obliterates any material distinction between the male and female altogether. This may explain why in ancient India evidence is found of homosexuality, bisexuality, androgyny, multiple sex partners, and open representation of sexual pleasures in artworks like the Khajuraho temples, being accepted within prevalent social frameworks.[13]

Gender in other contexts

The word "gender" is used in several contexts to describe binary differences, more or less loosely associated by analogy with various actual or perceived differences between men and women.

Language

Natural languages often make gender distinctions. These may be of various kinds:

  • Grammatical gender, a property of some languages in which every noun is assigned a gender, often with no direct relation to its meaning. For example, Spanish muchacha (grammatically feminine), German Mädchen (grammatically neuter), and Irish cailín (grammatically masculine) all mean "girl." The terms "masculine" and "feminine" are generally preferred to "male" and "female" in reference to grammatical gender.
  • The traditional use of different vocabulary by men and women. For instance, there are differences in spoken Japanese depending on whether the speaker is male or female.
  • The asymmetrical use of terms that refer to males and females. Concern that current language may be biased in favor of males has led some authors in recent times to argue for the use of more Gender-neutral language in English and other languages.

Connectors and fasteners

An electrical power male plug, left, and matching female socket.

In electrical and mechanical trades and manufacturing, and in electronics, each of a pair of mating connectors or fasteners (such as nuts and bolts) is conventionally assigned the designation "male" or "female." The assignment is by direct analogy with animal genitalia; the part bearing one or more protrusions, or which fits inside the other, being designated male and the part containing the corresponding indentations or fitting outside the other being female.

Music

In western music theory, keys, chords, and scales are often described as having "major" or "minor" tonality, sometimes related to "masculine" and "feminine." By analogy, the "major" scales are masculine (clear, open, extroverted), while the minor scales are given feminine qualities (dark, soft, introverted). Reflecting this connection to gender, German uses the word Tongeschlecht ("Tone gender") for tonality, and the words Dur (from Latin durus, hard) for major and moll (from Latin mollis, soft) for minor.

Notes

  1. Douglas Harper, gender Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved December 22, 2020.
  2. Charles Darwin, On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life (London: John Murray, 1859).
  3. David H. Skuse, Sexual dimorphism in cognition and behavior: the role of X-linked genes, European Journal of Endocrinology (155): 99-106.
  4. Robert W. Goy and Bruce S. McEwen, Sexual Differentiation of the Brain: Based on a Work Session of the Neurosciences Research Program. Retrieved December 22, 2020.
  5. Richard J. Haier, Rex E. Jung, Ronald A. Yeo, Kevin Head, and Michael T. Alkire, Structural Brain Variation and General Intelligence, NeuroImage 23 (2004): 425–433. Retrieved December 22, 2020.
  6. Linda Marsha, He Thinks, She Thinks, Discover, July 5, 2007. Retrieved December 22, 2020.
  7. J. Money, "Hermaphroditism, gender and precocity in hyperadrenocorticism: Psychologic findings," Bulletin of the Johns Hopkins Hospital 96: 253–264.
  8. Gilbert Herdt (ed.), Third Sex Third Gender: Beyond Sexual Dimorphism in Culture and History (Zone Books, 1996, ISBN 0942299825).
  9. Serena Nanda, Neither Man Nor Woman: The Hijras of India (Wadsworth Publishing, 1998, ISBN 0534509037).
  10. Will Roscoe, Changing Ones: Third and Fourth Genders in Native North America (Palgrave Macmillan, 2000, ISBN 0312224796).
  11. Sharyn Graham, Sulawesi's fifth gender Inside Indonesia, July 30, 2007.
  12. Joan Roughgarden, Evolution's Rainbow: Diversity, Gender, and Sexuality in Nature and People (University of California Press, 2004, ISBN 0520240731).
  13. Ashok Vohra, "The Male-Female Hologram," Times of India, March 8, 2005, Page 9.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Baron-Cohen, Simon. The Essential Difference: The Truth about the Male and Female Brain. Basic Books, 2003. ISBN 046500556X.
  • Brizendine, Louann. The Female Brain. New York: Morgan Road Books, 2006. ISBN 0767920100.
  • Brown, Donald E. Human Universals. Temple University Press, 1991. ISBN 0877228418.
  • Chafetz, J. S. Masculine/feminine or human? An Overview of the Sociology of Sex Roles. Itasca, IL: F. E. Peacock, 1978. ISBN 0875812317.
  • Darwin, Charles. On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. London: John Murray, 1859.
  • Herdt, Gilbert (ed.). Third Sex Third Gender: Beyond Sexual Dimorphism in Culture and History. Zone Books, 1996. ISBN 0942299825.
  • Kimura, Doreen. Sex and Cognition. MIT Press, 2000. ISBN 0262611640.
  • Moir, Anne, and David Jessel. Brain Sex: The Real Difference Between Men and Women. Delta, 1992. ISBN 0385311834.
  • Nanda, Serena. Neither Man Nor Woman: The Hijras of India. Wadsworth Publishing, 1998. ISBN 0534509037.
  • Pinker, Steven. The Blank Slate: A Modern Denial of Human Nature. London: Penguin Books, 2002. ISBN 0142003344.
  • Reddy, Gayatri. With Respect to Sex: Negotiating Hijra Identity in South India. University Of Chicago Press, 2005. ISBN 0226707563.
  • Roscoe, Will. Changing Ones: Third and Fourth Genders in Native North America. Palgrave Macmillan, 2000. ISBN 0312224796.
  • Roughgarden, Joan. Evolution's Rainbow: Diversity, Gender, and Sexuality in Nature and People. University of California Press, 2004. ISBN 0520240735.

External links

All links retrieved April 18, 2024.

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.