Hello all. I’ve methodically trudged through all 11 pages of this thread, and I find everyone’s comments very interesting. I don’t plan on getting embroiled in this thread simply because it has divulged into name-calling. I get called enough names in real life, and I don’t have the time to respond to the insults of a faceless forum member.
First of all, at least where I attend college, gender studies is a part of the Sociology department, not the Philosophy department. Sociology is the study of human behavior, particularly the study of the origins, organization, institutions, and development of human society.
Central to the topic of gender studies is the differentiation between what it means to be MALE/FEMALE, and what it means to be MASCULINE/FEMININE. A person’s sex is static and determined by nature, masculine and feminine qualities are fluid and crafted through socialization.
Gender studies does NOT deny that there are differences between men and women, but what it does assert is that most of these differences are due to different socialization of the masculine/feminine, and have nothing to do with what it actually means to be male or female.
On a side note, no one has ever denied in my gender studies classes that men are generally stronger and more athletic than women. This is a difference that is determined by sex, though, NOT gender.
My point is, is that many of the perceived “differences” between men and women are not so much catalyzed by their
physical sex, but by the different ways that
society initiates men/women into adulthood.
I wanted to leave this link for anyone that would like to look over it:
The Male Privilege Checklist
Readings like this are what true “feminism” is all about.
Frankly, I think the assertion that men are intellectually superior to women is a load of BS. 90% of my professors in college were female, the majority holding doctorates in their field. Women also tended to be more actively involved in my classes, and therefore their comments during discussion/lecture outshone the mens’. Finally, more females are enrolled in college nowadays than men. The new generation is awash with educated, thinking, reading females - out with the old, in with the new!