|
|||||
Gender
Issues In Psychology (PSY -
512)
VU
Lesson
03
HISTORICAL
BACKGROUND:
Two
main viewpoints exist in psychology
regarding gender
differences:
1.
Gender
variation is biological and
evolution-based in nature.....hence fixed
and un alterable.
Biological
differences
are there, BUT it is the
society that shapes and
nurtures gender roles. The
biological approach
has
roots
in evolutionary psychology and
has an essentialist
nature.
2.
The
biosocial approach has a broader
perspective and benefits from knowledge
and research in Sociology,
Anthropology,
Ethnology, and off course
Biology.
The
main issues are tackled in
these theories:
Who
made us what we are? Were we
born like that or are we a
product of the environment and the
society
that
we exist in?
Nature
versus Nurture?
There
is no denying the fact that men and
women are biologically
different, but are the roles
adopted by us also
predetermined?
Or, is it that we are made
to learn roles that that
suit our biological
make-up?
We
know that men are higher in
physical strength and women
in endurance and that may
explain many of the
roles
that we play in life.
Minimalist
and Maximalist views in
Psychology:
Epstein,
1988 describes the two opposing
viewpoints as minimalist
and
maximalist.
Maximalists
believe in huge, fundamental, differences
between men and women. A
number of maximalists
belong
to the essentialist perspective.
Minimalist
believes and proposes that
there are few fundamental,
deep, differences.
Earlier
Schools of Thought in Psychology and
Gender Differences:
Structuralism:
Structuralists
were primarily interested in the
structure of human mind.
Adult mental processes were
studied by
using
introspection. Structuralist's interest
was in the investigation of "generalized
adult mind" (Shields,
1975).
They were not concerned with
the effect of individual differences,
including difference between
men
and
women. Ignoring individual
differences did not mean
that structuralists treated
men and women
equally.
The
student subjects in structuralist
experiments were males. The
"generalized
adult mind" therefore
was a
"male
mind". In the
U.S, women were expressly
prohibited from one of the
early groups of experimental
psychologists
(Schultz & Schultz,
2004).
Functionalism
Psychology
and the psychologists took a
more pragmatic and practical
turn in the U.S. Functionalism
focused
upon
the functions of the mind rather than the
structure of mind. Functionalist
researches included a wider
variety
of subjects including women, children,
and animals. The
structuralists had excluded
groups like children,
animals,
the feebleminded and even
women.
Impact
of Studies on Intelligence and
Adaptability:
Intelligence
and adaptability were two major
areas of functionalist interest. As a
consequence they delved into
intelligence
test development and study of
individual differences. Individual
differences in mental ability,
and
personality
traits, including sex
differences were being compared
now.
The
Darwinian influence impacted the functionalists as
well. One of the popular areas of study
was the
biologically
determined differences which included
biological basis of sex
differences.
That
was perhaps the formal beginning of the
empirical investigation of sex differences,
although mostly quite
biased.
The findings usually tended
to support the conventional male-female
roles prevailing at that time.
The
impact
of social influence in terms of sex
differences was generally either ignored,
not touched upon, or
not
considered
worth investigation.
Some
of the typical findings of such
studies:
7
Gender
Issues In Psychology (PSY -
512)
VU
·
Women
were less intelligent than
men.
·
As
compared to men women benefited
less from education.
·
Women,
as compared to men, had a strong
maternal instinct.
·
Women
were unlikely to produce
examples of success or
eminence
(Brannon,
2004).
·
The
findings primarily suggested
that females were intellectually
deficient.
The
functionalists were interested in
"Nature" rather than "nurture". Study of
sex roles and cultural
concepts
of
"masculine" and "feminine"
did not interest them.
The gender-biased views or
findings of the functionalists
faced
strong criticism.
Female
psychologists like Helen
Thompson Woolley and Letta
Stetter Hollingworth criticized, argued
and took
a
stand against the functionalist
view of women.
Woolley
in the early 1900s raised the
point that the sex-difference
research reflected the researchers'
personal
bias,
sentiment, and
prejudice.
Hollingworth
believed that women's potential
can never be demonstrated
unless they were given an
opportunity
to choose the life they would
like, whether career or maternity, or
both.
Behaviorism:
This
approach brought forth a new
perspective. Behaviorism emerged
almost as a reaction to the
prevailing
introspective,
inner experience, approach.
The subject matter of
psychology for them was
observable behavior
alone,
rather than inner experience or
instinct.
The
behaviorists emphasized "nurture".
Although
their main emphasis was
different from the functionalists,
their
approach towards sex
differences was not much
different. Their primary interest
was in learning and
memory.
Sex differences and sex
roles along with other
social factors were
ignored.
These
early psychologists created "womanless"
psychology (Crawford and
Marecek, 1989). Their
research
negatively
affected the attention required by the sex/gender
difference issue in two
ways:
Their
research did not include
women as participants, or when both
men and women were
participants, gender
related
variables were not
examined.
Psychoanalytic
Psychology:
Psychoanalytic
Psychology, founded by Sigmund Freud,
has been the most
influential yet most
criticized
approach
in psychology. Psychoanalytic psychology
was the first to talk about
sex differences, personality
differences
between men and women.
Freud's theory gave an understanding of
the conceptualization of sex
and
gender.
Freudian
theory of personality:
Freud
talked about the developmental stages of personality
in terms of "Psycho-sexual
Development".
Personality
is guided and run by basic
energy; instincts are the
source of energy. The most
significant factor in
personality
formation is a child's perception of anatomical
difference between boys and
girls.
The
child's perception of bodily differences
between males and females
leads to a realization of what they do
not
have. The resultant feeling
and attitude leads to a
crucial conflict i.e., an attraction
towards the opposite-sex
parent,
and hostility towards the
same-sex parent develops. The
child ultimately reaches a
resolution of this
conflict
in the form of identification with the
same-sex parent. The case of
a male child is graver in
nature. He
undergoes
a deeper conflict and trauma
in personality development.
The
resolution comes in terms of
complete identification with the
father.
From
this, Freud drew the hypothesis for
which he may still be criticized: As
compared to women,
men
typically
form a stronger conscience
and a sense of social
values.
This
issue was hotly contested
and Freud criticized for what this
thinking implied.
Those
who believed in this theory interpreted
it to imply that women were
inferior to men.
Women
were jealous of men's
achievements, were less
ethical, more self-contemptuous,
and more concerned
with
their appearance.
Acceptance
of a feminine role meant
adopting low ranking
opportunities and an inferior
status. If any
woman
could
not reconcile with this situation,
she was considered to be a
case requiring psychotherapy,
since she was
not
accepting a role expected of
her. This thinking not only
hurt women but also
touched
8
Gender
Issues In Psychology (PSY -
512)
VU
men
who thought otherwise. They
felt that Freud was
proposing and strengthening the idea of
female
subservience
and a male dominated
society.
Freudian
theory gained unmatched
popularity all over the
world especially in the West. This
had implications in
terms
of influence on popular thinking.
For
the development of masculinity, the psychoanalytic
theory had very stringent and
inflexible standards:
The
male child whose masculinity
develops in a normal fashion undergoes
very severe anxiety and conflict
in
early
childhood
The
child develops hatred for
the father, fears him, and
undergoes trauma.
Then
he realizes that instead of breaking
from father he should identify
with him, become like
him, break from
mother,
and experience the advantages of manhood.
Now, can all boys completely
break away from
mothers
and
fully identify with the
father?
What
about sons attached to mothers? Or
fatherless sons?
The
boys who could not
break fully from mother,
and did not completely
identify with father, lack
a
normally
developed masculinity and have
feminine characteristics in their
personality.
Psychoanalytic
Feminism:
Psychoanalytic
feminism Roots in the work of Freud.
Gender is not a biologically determined
phenomenon.
Psychosexual
development leads to the gender role
that we adopt and
play.
Childhood
experiences are responsible
for making the male believe
that he is masculine and making a
female
believe
that she is feminine. These
experiences lead to gender
inequality. This is a result of a
male dominated
society.
9
Table of Contents:
|
|||||