SEARCH
You are in browse mode. You must login to use MEMORY

   Log in to start

A LEVEL SOCIOLOGY GENDER IDENTITY


🇬🇧
In English
Created:


Public
Created by:
Grace Neill


0 / 5  (0 ratings)



» To start learning, click login

1 / 10

[Front]


Define passive femininity
[Back]


Where a women accepts the traditional view that they should behave quietly, demure and submissive.

Practice Known Questions

Stay up to date with your due questions

Complete 5 questions to enable practice

Exams

Exam: Test your skills

Course needs 15 questions

Learn New Questions

Dynamic Modes

SmartIntelligent mix of all modes
CustomUse settings to weight dynamic modes

Manual Mode [BETA]

Select your own question and answer types
Specific modes

Learn with flashcards
Complete the sentence
Listening & SpellingSpelling: Type what you hear
multiple choiceMultiple choice mode
SpeakingAnswer with voice
Speaking & ListeningPractice pronunciation
TypingTyping only mode

A LEVEL SOCIOLOGY GENDER IDENTITY - Leaderboard

1 user has completed this course

No users have played this course yet, be the first


A LEVEL SOCIOLOGY GENDER IDENTITY - Details

Levels:

Questions:

10 questions
🇬🇧🇬🇧
Define passive femininity
Where a women accepts the traditional view that they should behave quietly, demure and submissive.
Define Normative femininity
There are socially acceptable ways for a women to behave in society. These are socially constructed and changeable and is focused on appearance and normative ways for women to look.
What is assertive femininity?
The view that women can resist masculine power and control
Define hegemonic masculinity
Traditional masculinity, male supremacy, breadwinner, aggression, laddish, heterosexual
What is subordinate masculinity?
Concerned with gay men who are viewed as behaving differently to the expectations of the dominant hegemonic masculinity
Define complicit masculinity
A masculinity which new men display. E.g. taking on a shared role in the family. (doing housework)
What is marginalised masculinity?
The changing nature of the labour market. There is a 'crisis of masculinity'
What does Oakley argue about gender identity
We are socialised into our gender through manipulation, canalisation, verbal appellations and different activities
How does Parsons disagree with Oakley?
He believes we are biologically designed to have these specific gender roles
What does Archer suggest?
Respect for the family features in the masculinity of Muslim boys