Jane McCredie - Making Girls and Boys : Inside the Science of Sex [Book Review]


Autoria(s): Rodgers, Jessica
Data(s)

01/03/2013

Resumo

Activists, Feminists, queer theorists, and those who live outside traditional gender narratives have long challenged the fixity of the sex and gender binaries. While the dominant Western paradigm posits sex and gender as natural and inherent, queer theory argues that sex and gender are socially constructed. This means that our ideas about sex and gender, and the concepts themselves, are shaped by particular social contexts. Questioning the nature of sex can be puzzling. After all, isn’t sex biology? Binary sex – male and female – was labelled as such by scientists based on existing binary categories and observations of hormones, genes, chromosomes, reproductive organs, genitals and other bodily elements. Binary sex is allocated at birth by genital appearance. Not everyone fits into these categories and this leads queer theorists, and others, to question the categories. Now, “some scientists are also starting to move away from the idea of biology as the fixed basis on which the social artefact of gender is built” (5). Making Girls and Boys: Inside the Science of Sex, by Jane McCredie, examines theories about gender roles and behaviours also considering those who don’t fit the arbitrary sex and gender binaries.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/65895/

Publicador

M/C — Media and Culture

Relação

http://reviews.media-culture.org.au/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=5120

Rodgers, Jessica (2013) Jane McCredie - Making Girls and Boys : Inside the Science of Sex [Book Review]. M/C Reviews.

Fonte

ARC Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation; Creative Industries Faculty

Palavras-Chave #160806 Social Theory #160808 Sociology and Social Studies of Science and Technology #169901 Gender Specific Studies #gender #sex #sex determinants #social construction
Tipo

Review