Gender & Social Stratification
Gender & Social Stratification
Gender & Social Stratification
Stratification
• The distinction between men and women, masculine
and feminine, is a fundamental basis of social and
cultural organization.
Gender & Social • Feminists argue that though becoming a man or a
Stratification woman is a natural process and linear development the
differences between men and women are a historical
and historically and culturally variables.
• For example, there are range of feminities and
masculinities but only some of them only become the
norm of the society.
• Sociological perspective, hence, try to understand such
social construction and differences that are manifested
in gender order.
• Gender differences are universal but culturally
variable. They are evident because in most
societies men are accorded high places in
relation to power and equality.
Gender • Gender inequalities that are manifested are
result of the complex form of social
Inequalities stratification in the society.
• Women are marginalised not only in cultural
beliefs, representations and practices but are
also oppressed and exploited through political,
economic, social and physical forms of power.
Disheartening
Statistic of
Violence against
Women
• The term patriarchy has been made popular by British
writer Virginia Woolf to refer to a system of government
in which men ruled societies through their position as a
head of household.
• Sociologists such Walby has used the term to refer to a
much broader form of social stratification in which men
dominate in whole range of settings.
Caste & and lowly by their male counterparts. Women are treated as
subordinates and their sexuality is controlled by men. In India
caste system is an important institution. This feature makes the
Gender Indian society highly stratified and hierarchical.
• Caste and gender are highly correlated. Though women of
upper caste face gender discrimination at every step of their
life and it is their men who control their destiny. Yet women of
upper caste are entitled to certain privileges. It is important to
note that these privileges are granted to them only when they
conform to the patriarchal order of society. Women of the
lower caste are the most disadvantaged lot. They are victim of
both gender discrimination and caste inequality
Gender is not a monolithic
category.
• Subordination of women is a marked feature of most stages
of recorded history and is widespread in large parts of the
world. This subordination is culturally constructed and
maintained at material and ideological levels, each
reinforcing the other (Nakkeeran 2003). What is more
important to remember here is that though subordination of
women is a universal phenomenon, the extent and nature of
subordination of women is conditioned by their social,
economic and cultural environment. Gender is, thus, not a
monolithic category.
Experiences of Black feminists
differ from White feminists
Intersectionality suggests that various forms of oppression– such as racism, classism, and sexism — are
interrelated to form a system of oppression in which various forms of discrimination intersect. The theory was
first highlighted by Kimberlé Krenshaw.
Intersectionality suggests that various biological, social, and cultural categories– including gender, race, class,
and ethnicity — interact and contribute towards systematic social inequality. Therefore, various forms of
oppression do not act independently but are interrelated.
Mary Ann Weathers drew attention to the ways in which white women face a different form of discrimination
than working class women of color, who additionally must fight racism and class oppression.
Intersectionality
• The feminist perspective of gender stratification more recently
takes into account intersectionality, a feminist sociological theory
first highlighted by feminist-sociologist Kimberlé Crenshaw.