Sexual Orientation - ANSWER -Defined by a person's attraction to and desire for people of a given sex
-What gender people are attracted to
-Generally conceived as a binary between heterosexuality and homosexuality
-Di
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Sexual Orientation - ANSWER -Defined by a person's attraction to and desire for people of a given sex
-What gender people are attracted to
-Generally conceived as a binary between heterosexuality and homosexuality
-Discussed in terms of categories (i.e. heterosexual, homosexual, bisexual, etc.)
Sexuality - ANSWER A person's sexual orientation or preference
Bisexuality - ANSWER Sexual attraction to both men and women
Compulsory Heterosexuality - ANSWER -Coined by Adrienne Rich
-The expected and assumed sexual orientation
-The idea that it can be adopted; that it is mandatory
-Rewarded with social privilege and power
-Makes coming out difficult because it impedes gays and lesbians from separating their sexual desires from the *learned* compulsion toward heterosexuality
Heteronormativity - ANSWER -Heterosexuality is constructed as the only normal appropriate behavior
-A racialized concept in which white bodies are implied as the normative subjects of heterosexual experience
Homophobia - ANSWER Intense hatred or fear of homosexuals by an *individual*
Heterosexism - ANSWER -Tied to homophobia; bias in favor of heterosexuality by a *culture*
-Disadvantages gays and lesbians
-Privileges heterosexuals
Queer - ANSWER -Sociopolitical umbrella term that refers to a range of sexual identities that are not "straight"
-Can refer to people who are gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender
-Denaturalizes and calls into question the stability of identity categories based on sexual orientation
-Used in academic disciplines as _______ theory or _______ studies from a non-heteronormative perspective
Heteroflexibility - ANSWER -Presumably heterosexual women hinting at or experimenting with same-sex sexuality
-An experiment in female same-sex sexuality that acknowledges some same sex desire/attraction without explicitly challenging a "mostly" heterosexual self-identification
Sexual Scripts - ANSWER -Rules that guide sexual interaction
Ideas we have about how people should engage in sexual activity
---For example: men should only ask women out
-Women should be sexy, but not too sexy
-Older, married couples aren't interested in sex, etc.
-Men should be interested in pornography, women should not
-Ideas/stereotypes about men and women created in our society about their proper roles in terms of sexual behavior/activity
Issues Surrounding LGBTQ - ANSWER -Highest suicide rates
-Bullying
Beauty Myth - ANSWER Some bodies are more attractive than others, and in essence, worth more than others
Women's Bodies Culturally Constructed - ANSWER -Thin, young, beautiful, light skinned
-Sexy but innocent
-Objectified to sell products
-Sex objects in magazines set up for male gaze
Male Gaze - ANSWER -Ideal spectator is always assumed to be male and image of the women is designed to flatter him
-Males do the "gazing" and females are objects of the gaze
-Women receive the gaze, return the gaze, but never act on it
Beauty Standard - ANSWER -The average model is 5'11" and weighs 117 lbs.
-The average woman is 5'4" and weighs 140 lbs.
-We measure size and beauty by models who are 23% thinner than the average woman
-Models are genetically thin, long-legged, big breasted
-Their pictures are then airbrushed and computer enhanced
Body Dissatisfaction - ANSWER -Women direct their dissatisfaction with their lives due to unequal relations toward themselves and their bodies
-4 out of 5 women are unhappy with their bodies
-At least 1 in 5 young women in America today suffer from an eating disorder
-The Number 1 wish of girls 7 & 8 years old is to be thinner
Anorexia Nervosa - ANSWER -Severe weight loss
-Slowly starving
-Accompanied by a distorted body image
-Believe they are "fat" when in reality they are dangerously underweight
-Body weight is controlled through self imposed starvation, excessive exercise, diuretic drugs, etc.
Bulimia Nervosa - ANSWER -A pattern of binging on food, followed by purging through vomiting
-Use of laxatives and/or extreme fasting
Compulsory Overeating - ANSWER Recurring pattern of binge eating without compensatory counter measures
Aging and The Body - ANSWER -Youth centered culture
-Increase in plastic surgery
-Prevalence of anti-aging beauty products
-"Acceptable" aging involves remaining sexualized and youth-oriented
Plastic Surgery - ANSWER -Previously done on men for war/ industrial accidents
-Now largely outnumbered by women seeking it for purely aesthetic purposes
-"Restored youth" "permanent beauty"
-Women are told that they can stop/slow aging by literally buying new and better bodies
Body Representation in Media - ANSWER -Does not portray real lives and behaviors of actual men and women
-Creates an ideal image of both bodies and lifestyles that relies on beauty and wealth
-Assumes men and women will try to imitate both the physical appearance and lifestyles of men and women in ads
Compulsive Exercising - ANSWER -Another way to "purge" calories, can be as dangerous as Anorexia and Bulimia
-Main goal is burning calories, relieving the guilt from eating/bingeing, or to give them the permission to eat
Body Image - ANSWER The subjective picture or mental image of one's own body
Eating Disorders - ANSWER Any of a range of psychological disorders characterized by abnormal or disturbed eating habits
-Culture
-Media - ANSWER Body Image Influencers
Gender Attitude Stereotypes - ANSWER -Girls/Women are socialized to be passive, polite, and accommodating
-Boys/Men are socialized to be aggressive, tough, and in control of themselves and their surroundings
Domestic (Intimate or Partner) Violence - ANSWER A pattern of behavior that includes the use or threat of violence and intimidation for the purpose of gaining power and control over another person
Types of Domestic Violence - ANSWER -Physical Abuse
-Sexual Abuse
-Economic Abuse
-Isolation
-Emotional Abuse
-Control
-Verbal Abuse
When S/he Leaves/After S/he Leaves - ANSWER The most dangerous time for a victim of domestic violence
Cycle of Domestic Violence - ANSWER -Three part process that frequently occurs in violent relationships
1. Tension building
2. Explosion
3. Honeymoon phase
Domestic Violence Stereotypes - ANSWER -Race
-Ethnicity
-Class
-Sexuality
-Region
-Religion
Domestic Violence Representations - ANSWER -Often stereotypical perpetrators and victims
---Law and Order SVU
---Charlie Sheen and Chris Brown
Stalking - ANSWER -Gendered
-Not taken seriously
-Increased due to technology
-Depicted as romantic or endearing in the media
Street Harassment - ANSWER A wide variety of comments and behaviors in which strangers on the street (typically men) comment in a variety of ways about female appearance and/or ask for or refer to a desire to engage in sexual activity
Sexualization of Violence - ANSWER -Gender and sexuality often conflated
-Sexual scripts are gendered
-Violence and sex become intertwined
-"Rape culture": We must contextualize violence within a cultural system in which sex and violence are inextricably linked
Rape - ANSWER -Any sexual act committed against a person's will
-Sexual assault: knowingly engaging in sexual intercourse or oral sexual contact with any person without the consent of that person
Date Rape/Acquaintance Rape - ANSWER -Sexual assault by someone you know
-Most common: 75%
Rape Myths - ANSWER -Rape is a crime of passion
-Rape only happens to those who ask for it
-Women actually fantasize about being raped or having forced sex
-Women lie about being raped
-Women cannot be raped against their will
-Men and boys cannot be raped
-Most rapes are spontaneous acts in dark alleys between strangers
-Rapists are insane criminals
Victim Blaming - ANSWER -We tend to believe that people somehow participated in their own victimization
-Not only do we blame the victim, they blame themselves
-Serves as a psychological protective mechanism
Violence Against Women - ANSWER -Any violation of a woman's personhood; mental, physical, emotional
-Reflective of a culture that normalizes and glamorizes violence
-Men are overwhelmingly the perpetrators
-Social constructionist view: This is not "natural"!
Glorification of Violence in Media - ANSWER -Tough Guise: violent masculinity as normal or ideal, rather than a problem
-Action films & horror films
-Video games
-Music
-Sports
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