Gender Roles

712 Words2 Pages

Society today introduces children to certain roles that are generally related to their biological sex. Gender roles refer to the world’s perception of how men and women are anticipated to act and behave. Gender roles are based on norms created by society. In American culture, males are usually viewed as dominant, tough, and belligerent, while females are traditionally viewed as compliant, nurturing, and inferior to men. Gender roles are defined by society’s views. To prove that gender roles are defined by the perspective of humanity, the articles that will be used are “What Makes a Woman a Woman?” by Peggy Orenstein, “Faking It” by Michael Chabon, “The Body Narrative of Transsexuality” by Jay Prosser, and lastly, “The M/F Boxes” …show more content…

Society was quick to question whether Semenya was actually a woman, as she claimed to be. “A girl who may not be a girl! That chest! Those arms! That face!” (Orenstein, 705). Orenstein shows how society defines what a woman should look like to be considered a woman. Orenstein relates her own personal experience to Semenya’s when faced with the decision of a double mastectomy and the removal of her ovaries due to a hereditary tendency of reproductive cancers. Orenstein talks directly about the incident, remembering different moments of insecurity concerning her sex following the diagnosis: “without breasts or hormone-producing ovaries, what would the difference be, say, between myself and a pre-op female-to-male transsexual? That seemed an awfully thin straw on which to base my entire sense of womanhood. What, precisely, made me a girl anyway? Who got to decide?” (Orenstein, 706). Society tends to believe that a woman must have breasts to be considered a woman. Today’s civilization goes to show that culture has a massive impact on gender …show more content…

“[. . .] it became apparent that someone would have to put up a second towel rack. Responsibility for this task logically fell to the person who knew, kind of, how to use an electric drill” (Chabon, 715). Society’s perspective of what makes a man a man is the ability to do the handy work of building and repairing things, showing physical, as well as, mental strength. Chabon proves this again using his father as an example, “I have never forgotten the day . . . when I watched in silent horror as my father, imperturbable and confident and disdaining the instruction sheet, assembled an entire barbeque grill with its key pieces upside down and backward (Chabon, 717). Humanity makes it seem as though a male must always appear confident. In his article, Chabon says “This is an essential element of being a man: to flood everyone around you in a great radiant arc of bullshit . . . but in reality, the trick of being a man is to give the appearance of keeping your head when, deep inside, the truest part of you is crying out, Oh, shit! . . . Men’s refusal to stop and ask for directions, a foundational cliché of women’s criticism, analysis, and stand up mockery of male behavior is a perfect example of this tendency to put up this front . . .” (716-717). Chabon proves that society has this perspective where a man can not

Open Document