To start with the article “How Boys Become Men”, the author is trying to convey the reader that boys since a young age, they have the primitiveness of being men. Moreover, they try faking it at least. For example, when the bag slammed the kid’s side of face, he acted like it was normal and he said proudly he is not a chicken, while on the other side his mother screamed when she saw his swollen face. Women have another perspective of men; they think that they do not have humanity or feelings just because they are not showing it.…
In today’s society, people tend to group one and an another into different categories according to their own social identity. An individual’s gender identity refers to which group where one belongs to. The attributes assigned to both males and females are different because of gender differences. In “Becoming members of Society: Learning the Social Meanings of Gender” by Aaron Devor, the author argues that factors such as beliefs and behaviors help differentiate the sexual identity of a person. In addition, Devor views sex as an instrument of determining gender. It is believed that there are only two types of sexes that exist. Which are male and female. On the other hand, “Girl”, by Jamaica Kincaid, the mother tries to forces prescribe behavior,…
Two writers - Garibaldi, a high school teacher and Kimmel, a professor of sociology noted that consequences of feminism movement are harming boys in school and later in life. Kimmel and Garibaldi present their view on gender problem in their articles “How the school shortchange boys” and “A war against boys”. They both make passionate arguments and prove that boys became disadvantaged in modern feminized classrooms. Kimmel’s arguments about boys’ problems in the American educational system are more convincing than Girrabaldi’s, because his style of argumentation is more objective.…
Sellers, H. “Energy.” The Practice of Creative Writing: A Guide for Students. Ed. Leasa Burton. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2008. 69-100. Print.…
It is claimed by some people that your gender has an effect on your occupation. In other words, the forced gender roles shown in the past society stereotypes your occupation for life. In Sandra Cisneros's novel “The House on Mango Street”, she suggests that people are put into unwanted roles and boundaries due to stereotypes. Through this book, as Esperanza grows up in a poorer community, we watch her deal with the gender stereotypes found in society. There are many clear themes found in this novel, such as sometimes people are put into roles that they can’t control and can’t get out of, due to the public expectations of them. This theme is revealed through three vignettes: “Born Bad”, “Papa Who Wakes up Tired in The Dark”, and “Edna’s Ruthie.”…
Gender unfortunately can play one of the biggest roles in a human’s existence when living in a place as seen in chapter seven. It can determine your job, your salary, your treatment around people in a social situation, and ultimately, it can determine your whole life. Countless women around the world (including women in the core) are constantly being discriminated against for being…
Although America is an ever-changing country some things never change. Within many years women have fought through countess barriers yet haven't gotten too far from the original stereotypes of them. The conventional gender identities shape women in present society, while creating a war within the women whether to be ideal feminine and motherly, or sophisticated corporate and selfish.…
“Boys and Girls” is a short story written by Alice Monroe, this is a story about a young girl's resistance to womanhood in a society infested with gender roles and stereotypes. Munro makes the point that gender stereotyping, relationships, and a loss of innocence play an important, and often controversial role in the growing and passing into adulthood. This story takes place in the 1940s on a fox farm outside of Jubilee. During this time, women are viewed as second class citizens, but the narrator is not going to accept this position without a fight. One of the themes of Monroe’s “Boys and Girls” is people cannot escape society's rules and prejudice of gender so in order to be accepted they must conform to society's gender rules. Monroe shows this through the symbolism, use of setting and characterization.…
In her story, Boys and Girls, Alice Munro depicts the hardships and successes of the rite of passage into adulthood through her portrayal of a young narrator and her brother. Through the narrator, the subject of the profound unfairness of sex-role stereotyping, and the effect this has on the rites of passage into adulthood is presented. The protagonist in Munro's story, unidentified by a name, goes through an extreme and radical initiation into adulthood, similar to that of her younger brother. Munro proposes that gender stereotyping, relationships, and a loss of innocence play an extreme, and often-controversial role in the growing and passing into adulthood for many young children. Initiation, or the rite of passage into adulthood, is, according to the theme of Munro's story, both a mandatory and necessary experience.…
This book highlighted a lot of the vexation and anguish women felt when it came to social and politic inequality to men and it sparked the beginning of the women’s liberation movement (feminism) and second-wave feminism, which was a period where feminism was spread around the world. Protests followed soon after, giving way to new laws like the Roe v. Wade trial, which ruled that women had the right to have an abortion. American Society slowly changed its views and treatment of women, which was one of the biggest changes made when it came to gender…
Everybody in today’s society experiences gender throughout his or her life. However, as a female, I have personally always been affected by the social construction of gender in my day-to-day life, whether I was aware of it or not. Gender is such a prominent aspect of life for everyone that we barely recognize the effect it has on us, especially when it’s constructed within our own families.…
The purpose of the Boys and Girls Club is to give all children a safe and positive place to learn and grow. The Boys and Girls Club create their own recreation and companionships in the streets. All young children should be made aware that the community cares for them and that’s why the Boys and Girls clubs were created. This club was designed to promote and enhance the children by giving them a sense of competence, usefulness, belonging, and influence by working together with the community and schools. The Boys and Girls Clubs have been proven to be effective and have decreased the high school dropout crisis.…
Gender roles are a delicate and controversial matter and easily have been one of the most debated upon topics since the beginning of time. When did they start? When will they end? How young are you when they start? These are all questions that have been asked numerous sociologists trying to figure out this aged question. Alice Munro depicts a minute aspect of a young girl’s life growing up already struggling with the gender role conflict, even at her young age.…
In contrast, the short story “Girl” by Jamaica Kincaid suggests that women are sentenced to patriarchy as a result of socially constructed gender stereotypes. She criticizes the idealized patriarchal norms and pressures which overshadow the lives of women. Starting early on in their childhood, little girls are explicitly exposed to the pressures and expectations of how they should live. As a result of gender stereotypes, young girls are brainwashed to believe that their role as a woman is a domestic homemaker and that they should always be kempt and maintain a feminine outer appearance. Kincaid ultimately criticizes how women and girls are trapped under a system of patriarchy that can not be erased.…
Society and stereotypes affect the way children develop their ideas and, consequently it has a major effect in their futures. Opposed to that, Christina Hoff Sommers present her article “The War Against Boys” arguing that boys are facing a crisis that is directly affecting their scores in school, their propensity to violence and crime and their lack of motivation to go to college. According to her, the ones to blame are the feminist efforts to promote girls and create programs to boost their academic careers. These efforts are doing more than just improve girls’ performance in school; they are harming boys by diverting the attention from them. As a direct response to Sommers’ article, Michael Kimmel expresses his opposition with his article “A War Against Boys?” which refutes Sommers’ ideas of misguided feminism, and offers a different insight to the crisis that boys are facing. Kimmel effectively refutes Sommers’ article by offering different points of view and distinctive propositions to why boys are facing a crisis.…