Learning To Be Gendered By Penelope Eckert's Learning To Be Gendered?

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Symbolic culture takes effect on a baby from the instant it is within its mother’s womb. The question then rises: “boy or girl?”. The purpose of that question is what drives the process of gendering today, and is the topic of the article, Learning to Be Gendered, by Penelope Eckert and Sally McConnell-Ginet. Assigning gender to an individual is an act that sets out the life - and sometimes roles - that one can expect whilst growing up in society. The concept is ages old, and is a result of human observance and nature. Gendering newborns into the world is a naturally occurring process that yields potential negative results due to the socialization of gender stereotypes from birth. The article focuses primarily on the socializing aspect of gendering. …show more content…

The global society today is heavily influenced by various entities that conflict with the development of a gender identity, such as religion, nationality, etc. Moreover, in many parts of the world, women and men are expected to fulfill specific, fixed roles in their societies. If an individual were to assign themselves a gender different than the one they were assigned at birth, it could potentially lead to conflicts that range in various scales of severity. The article mentions how we associate physical objects and colors with genders, as we give boys the color blue and menacing, tough, and moving objects such as trucks, and we give girls the color pink and still, colorful, and cared for dolls (737,738). In agreement, this can be proven by the fact that male brains are hardwired to focus on motion whereas female brains are hardwired onto still objects and caring for others. Furthermore, this can also be aligned with the early behaviors of humans, in which males would go out hunting, and therefore require motion as a source of tracking prey, and females would gather food such as herbs and berries, which didn’t move, but had significant color contrasts to make them easy to spot. As a result, humans began to notice these tendencies hardwired into genders, and consequently applied certain objects to them. Because of these natural occurrences, it is assumed …show more content…

Through the assumption that babies will develop certain attitudes and behaviors because of their nature, the gap between genders will only further increase. It is normal, and natural for certain behaviors to exist amongst males and females, but forcing them produces a lack of social versatility and capabilities. From what we can see, the future is leading us to a time where gender can be given to oneself, rather than having it assigned, and that, is a good

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