The Importance Of Gender Communication

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Although, it may be not recognized, gender is expressed through mindsets, non-verbal communication. According to Zimmerman (1987) , it is revealed that in order to realize the affect gender holds in society, one must step back and separate themselves from the perspectives on what sex and gender should look like that exist. Gender communication relates to expressions used by one gender in different types of relationships and roles amongst others. When communication was observed in gender separated environments to promote discussion, there were numerous differences observed in the ways that the men and women expressed themselves (How Do We Learn Gender?, 2015). Women held the ability to reveal a lot of personal information in group discussions …show more content…

Norms of gender performance are policed through social means; extreme deviations from appropriate displays of gender are either stigmatized or treated as entertainment for a “normal” audience to find it comical, for instance the way the media portrays RuPaul’s Drag Race, or the homosexual couple in the television show, Modern Family instead of respecting feminine men that do not fit the standard of what society defines as a man (Butler, …show more content…

Findings from The Census Bureau suggested that females are designated as the default parent; the parent who mainly manages a child’s needs alone. In 2010, it was recorded that only 32% of fathers were primary caretakers of their children (Rampbell, 2010). However, in the common situation where the woman is the primary caretaker it is not considered an arrangement, but the norm. The article suggests that when a man fulfills a responsibility that in society’s perspective is part of a woman’s role, he receives appraisal whereas a woman does not (Schulten, 2012). Gender roles in parenting begins with the standards set at birth throughout modeling older generations of what is expected of an individual and what skills are expected in parenthood. The skills for adulthood based on each gender is very prevalent during child rearing regarding gendered-colors such as pink or blue, clothing being appropriated for genders separately, and most importantly the toys that support natalism (Allen,

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