User:Timothy Perper/Sandbox: Difference between revisions

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imported>D. Matt Innis
(clarify where to type it!)
imported>Timothy Perper
(adding gender revision)
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==Revision of Gender ==
Here's the start of a proposed revision of this short article. (From [[Gender]].)
== Gender==
Among sexologists and scholars of sexuality and gender, "gender" characteristically refers to
'''(1)''' the internal psychological experience of being female or male (or neither) in one's own society and one's own personal history or biography.
'''(2)''' a set of socially and culturally defined and shared roles, rules, and scripts for how to be male or female in a specified society at a specifed time in its history.<ref name="FrDict">Francoeur, Robert F., Martha Cornog, Timothy Perper, and Norman A. Scherzer, Editors. (1995). "The Complete Dictionary of Sexology, New Expanded Edition." New York: Continuum.</ref>
As an internal psychological experience, gender is closely related to the idea of "gender identity," which is the experienced conviction that one ''is'' female or male (or neither).<ref name="FrDict"/> Likewise, the idea of gender is related to what sociologists and social critics call "sex roles," which are the ''normative'' activities assigned socially to women and to men in a given society and time.<ref name="Seward">Seward, Georgene H. and Robert C. Williamson, Editors. (1970). "Sex Roles in Changin]g Society." NY: Random House. A classical reference with ground-breaking essays by a number of scholars.</ref> The notion of gender is distinguished from sex, which refers to one's biological endowments anatomically, physiologically, and reproductively.<ref name="Money1>Reference to come.</ref> Gender has other meanings as well, for example, in linguistics to denote the "gender" of a noun, but this article deals with the word's sexual and social meanings.
==Notes and References==
{{reflist}}
==See also==
[[Sex]]
[[Feminism]]
== Creation of Sandboxes ==
Tim, here's a sandbox I made for you,  Notice that you can make one any time you like just by going to your user page and typing in the address bar above it - "/Sandbox" (or whatever you want) after your name.  It would look like this <nowiki>http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/User:Timothy_Perper/Sandbox</nowiki>.  Have fun!  [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 07:38, 25 September 2008 (CDT)
Tim, here's a sandbox I made for you,  Notice that you can make one any time you like just by going to your user page and typing in the address bar above it - "/Sandbox" (or whatever you want) after your name.  It would look like this <nowiki>http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/User:Timothy_Perper/Sandbox</nowiki>.  Have fun!  [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 07:38, 25 September 2008 (CDT)

Revision as of 11:15, 26 September 2008

Revision of Gender

Here's the start of a proposed revision of this short article. (From Gender.)

Gender

Among sexologists and scholars of sexuality and gender, "gender" characteristically refers to

(1) the internal psychological experience of being female or male (or neither) in one's own society and one's own personal history or biography.

(2) a set of socially and culturally defined and shared roles, rules, and scripts for how to be male or female in a specified society at a specifed time in its history.[1]

As an internal psychological experience, gender is closely related to the idea of "gender identity," which is the experienced conviction that one is female or male (or neither).[1] Likewise, the idea of gender is related to what sociologists and social critics call "sex roles," which are the normative activities assigned socially to women and to men in a given society and time.[2] The notion of gender is distinguished from sex, which refers to one's biological endowments anatomically, physiologically, and reproductively.[3] Gender has other meanings as well, for example, in linguistics to denote the "gender" of a noun, but this article deals with the word's sexual and social meanings.

Notes and References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Francoeur, Robert F., Martha Cornog, Timothy Perper, and Norman A. Scherzer, Editors. (1995). "The Complete Dictionary of Sexology, New Expanded Edition." New York: Continuum.
  2. Seward, Georgene H. and Robert C. Williamson, Editors. (1970). "Sex Roles in Changin]g Society." NY: Random House. A classical reference with ground-breaking essays by a number of scholars.
  3. Reference to come.

See also

Sex

Feminism


Creation of Sandboxes

Tim, here's a sandbox I made for you, Notice that you can make one any time you like just by going to your user page and typing in the address bar above it - "/Sandbox" (or whatever you want) after your name. It would look like this http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/User:Timothy_Perper/Sandbox. Have fun! D. Matt Innis 07:38, 25 September 2008 (CDT)