What does it really mean to be a "male" or a "female"? Are gender identity and sexual preferences genetically determined?

Authors Avatar

CC608 Men & Women, Love & Work                 

What does it really mean to be a "male" or a "female"? Are gender identity and sexual preferences genetically determined? Can they be reduced to one's sex? Or are they amalgams of biological, social, and psychological factors in constant interaction? Are they immutable lifelong features or dynamically evolving frames of self-reference? These are questions posed by social scientists regarding the differences between male and female. In this article on ‘Sex and Gender’, there are three schools of thoughts being discussed. Biological determinism, sex-gender theories and social constructionism.

What makes a person who he is depends on the society and how he is being brought up. Being born a male does not been that a person will have masculine characteristics, it goes for a female. According to biological determinism, masculinity characteristics are assertiveness, aggression, competitiveness and logical thinking. Femininity characteristics are emotional, caring, nurturing, preoccupied with beauty and relationships, distrusting or less capable of logical thinking. In the society, there are many females who hold high position in companies and they have the assertiveness and aggression that some of the male counterparts does not have. Similarly, there are a lot of cosmetics products in the market that are for men. Who says that being a male, beauty is not important, as everyone would want to bring the best out of themselves in all areas?

Join now!

Social constructionism approach believes that gender is a process and that people work not only to establish who they want to be but also help to construct the social and biological categories themselves. This approach is reflective of the current society. Men and women does not have a fixed set of characteristics, although there are some things that men are generally superior than women and vice versa. Based on the textbook, Analyzing Gender (Gailey, 1987), the definition of masculinity and femininity differ between societies and gender categories are not fixed.

The sex of a baby can be determined ...

This is a preview of the whole essay