Results for '"gender display"'

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  1. Dog Ownership as a Gender Display.Michael Ramirez - forthcoming - Between the Species.
     
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    Комунікативна зумовленість гендерної ідентичності в соціально-філософському вимірі.Svitlana Zagurska - 2016 - Схід 4 (144):84-88.
    The essential factors of implementation of gender identification in the context of social and communication interaction have been considered in terms of the social and philosophical analysis. The author focuses on the achievements of postmodern philosophy in terms of the scientific analysis that focused on the problem of understanding gender marking subjectivity not as immutable biological forms but as socially constructed conducted by certain types of social and communicative strategies. The author indicates that different social aspects of biological sex of (...)
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  3. WHAT IT MEANS TO BE GENDERED ME: Life on the Boundaries of a Dichotomous Gender System.Betsy Lucal - 1999 - Gender and Society 13 (6):781-797.
    What are the implications of living in a gender system that recognizes “two and only two” genders? For those individuals whose “gender displays” are inappropriate, there can be a variety of consequences, many of them negative. In this article, the author provides an analysis of her experiences as a woman whose appearance often leads to gender misattribution. She discusses the consequences of the gender system for her identity and her interactions. The author also examines Lorber's assertion that “gender bending” actually (...)
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    Gendered Deference: Perceptions of Authority and Competence among Latina/o Physicians in Medical Institutions.Maricela Bañuelos & Glenda M. Flores - 2021 - Gender and Society 35 (1):110-135.
    Prior studies note that gender- and race-based discrimination routinely inhibit women’s advancement in medical fields. Yet few studies have examined how gendered displays of deference and demeanor are interpreted by college-educated and professional Latinas/os who are making inroads into prestigious and masculinized nontraditional fields such as medicine. In this article, we elucidate how gender shapes perceptions of authority and competence among the same pan-ethnic group, and we use deference and demeanor as an analytical tool to examine these processes. Our analysis (...)
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