Just as every society has an economic and political structure, so too every society has a gender structure. Barbara Risman's original research on single fathers, married baby boom mothers, and heterosexual egalitarian couples and their children, reported in this intriguing book, weaves together qualitative and quantitative data from surveys, interviews, and observation. Risman shows how gender as a social structure affects individuals, organizes expectations attached to social positions, and becomes an integral part of social institutions. She provides empirical evidence that human beings are capable of enduring and affective intimate relationships without gender as the central organizing mechanism. The data also strongly indicate that men and women are capable of changing gendered ways of being throughout their lives. In her analysis of nontraditional families, Risman finds that gender expectations can be overcome if couples are willing to flout society and risk "gender vertigo." Most children of such families adopt their parents' beliefs about gender, but they do struggle with the contradictions between parental ideology and folk knowledge and expectations in peer relationships. The author argues that we can create a just society only by creating a society in which gender is an irrelevant category for social life--a post-gender society.
Connell ( 1995 ) , and later Barbara Risman ( 1998 ) , use the term " gender vertigo " to represent the results of extreme attempts to challenge normative assumptions of masculinity and femininity , to push beyond as many transgendered ...
Introduction -- Gender as a social structure -- Millennials as emerging adults -- Getting the stories : data collection and methodology -- The true believers -- The innovators -- The rebels -- The straddlers -- Bringing gender into the ...
She feels that the doing-gender perspective is helpful, yet incomplete, and that the extension from doing gender to doing difference is an important direction of focus in gender research. gender vertigo Gender vertigo is a term coined ...
Introducing modern gender studies, gender theories and gender politics, this text traces the history of Western intellectuals' ideas and discusses current findings on gender differences, inequalities and patterns in the state and ...
The editors and contributors are leading social scientists from six continents, and the book gives vivid accounts of the changing politics of gender in different communities.
In this book, a leading scholar clearly defines three differentframeworks: the individual, the interactional, and theinstitutional.
A fresh collection of original essays by leading scholars that explores how families operate in everyday life.
And while the resulting shifts in how gender is embodied, and as a result enacted in everyday life, could feel a little like vertigo,4 we argue that it is up to all of us to work to overcome this vertigo in order for the Marcias and ...
Features: Discusses clinical assessment of the dizzy patient, diagnosis and management of the condition, surgical options, and psychological complications of vertigo and dizziness Explores a host of conditions, including benign paroxysmal ...
Jodi O’Brien and Arlene Stein, former Contexts Editors, have chosen pieces that are timely, thought-provoking, and especially suitable for classroom use; written introductions that frame each of the books three main sections; and provided ...