Sexism Definitions Sexism 1 Prejudice or discrimination based on sex especially discrimination against women 2 Behaviors conditions or attitudes that foster stereotypes of social roles based on sex ID: 142523
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Slide1
Philosophy 220
SexismSlide2
Definitions
Sexism
: 1. Prejudice or discrimination based on sex;
especially
: discrimination against women. 2. Behaviors, conditions, or attitudes that foster stereotypes of social roles based on sex.
Prejudice
: negative beliefs or attitudes about people because of their race, sex, ethnic origin, etc.. Having such beliefs makes a person a sexist or racist.
Discrimination
: actions or practices directed against individuals or groups on the basis of their race, sex, ethnic origin, etc..
Intentional vs. Unintentional
Interpersonal vs. InstitutionalSlide3
Moral Theories?
Consequentialism: sexism is wrong because of the negative consequences of such beliefs and practices.
Kantianism: all persons regardless of biological sex are deserving of equal respect and thus sexism violates the categorical imperative, as it treats people as means rather than as ends in themselves
.Slide4
Frye on Sexism
Frye’s
challenge is to provide an account of sexism that captures what is (for her) its pervasive character and has the capacity to convince the skeptic.
Here approach is to start with the relatively non-controversial claim that processes of sex-identification are ubiquitous and pervasive, and then argue that as institutionalized in our culture, these processes have the effect of systematically privileging males.
Her focus then is primarily on institutional sexism.Slide5
Sex-Marking
Sex-Marking
:
the ways in which we respond to members of a
biological sex.
Example: Couple goes to a restaurant, waiter addresses the man but not the
woman
On Frye’s
account, even the most innocent appearing interaction between people is heavily determined by marked sex-differences.
What about the handshake
?Slide6
Sex-Announcement
Sex Announcement
:
the ways in which we announce our sex to others
Example: Style of dress
Not only
are these forms of
determination common but
they are
enforced to a significant degree by social norms.
Small children, “Queen,” “Dyke.”Slide7
What Does it Mean?
Frye acknowledges that the pressure to mark and announce our sex is equally present for men and women.
However, she argues that the implications of this pressure are markedly different for men and women.
“…
one feature which never tends to his disadvantage…is his maleness…one feature which always tends to
her
disadvantage is her
femaleness” (237c2
).
Moving in the public sphere, dominant forms of interaction,
(marking and announcing)
all,
“…
tend systematically to the benefit of males and the detriment of
females” (238c2
).Slide8
Subordination and Oppression
The systematic consequences of the differential meaning of sex marking all tend, on
Frye’s
account to accomplish the subordination of women.
That is the practical meaning of sexism:
oppression
.
“…
a system of interrelated barriers and forces which reduce, immobilize and mold people who belong to a certain group, and effect their subordination to another group
…” (238c2).
Physical, material oppression is expensive; much better to accomplish it by producing the subordination as a system of cultural norms.Slide9
The Myth of the Natural
Many people who contest this point of view point to
“natural”
differences between men and women.
Frye
doesn’t
deny that there are biological differences.
Rather, she argues that the differences themselves do not explain or account for the socialization around sex roles that we experience.Slide10
Breaking Bad Habits
The first step towards reversing our current situation is to look around and notice that not everything is as clear and certain as it appears.
When we notice this, we are in a position to take on our own habits, struggling against those which encourage and enforce subordination and oppression.Slide11
Frye’s
Definition of Sexism
“The
term
sexist
characterizes cultural and economic structures which create and enforce the elaborate and rigid patterns of sex-marking and sex-announcing which divide the species, along lines of sex, into dominators and subordinates. Individual acts and practices are sexist which reinforce and support those structures, either as cultural or as shapes taken on by the
enculturated
animals. Resistance to sexism is that which undermines those structures by social and political action and by projects of reconstruction and revision of
ourselves” (241c2)
.Slide12
Garcia on Racism and Sexism
Garcia examines the common assumption that racism is an appropriate model for understanding sexism.
While ultimately wanting to affirm this assumption, he argues that most instances of this assumption, based as they are on inadequate accounts of racism, provide an inadequate account of sexism.
He supplies what he considers to be a better account of racism, thus allowing a more adequate treatment of sexism.Slide13
Limits of our Thinking about Racism
Most attempts to make the comparison in question rely on an account of racism that fails to capture the complexity of the phenomenon.
Things that go missing include:
Racist attitudes can persist in the absence of racist institutions or ideology.
Racist institutions need not be systemic.
Racism
does not
require the concentration
of power
.
As a result of problems like these, common accounts of racism end up failing to encompass a whole range of attitudes and behaviors that must count as racist.Slide14
What We Believe and How
If focus on oppressive practices
doesn’t
do the job, what about focus on prejudiced beliefs?
This focus
doesn’t
seem to work either. It is easy to come up with a couple of counter-examples:
Is a person who has a belief because
they’ve
been indoctrinated into it a racist?
Can’t
someone act in a racist fashion without holding associated beliefs?
Many theorists have responded by insisting that
it’s
not just what you believe but how you believe it: as an ideology resistant to criticism or in
“bad
faith
.”Slide15
A New way of Thinking Racism
While Garcia does not think that this strategy is successful, it does suggest an approach that he thinks does the work necessary.
The key turns out to be not the
racist
’
s
beliefs nor the social systems which they encourage but in her
“
desires
, hopes and goals
.
”
Racism
, on this understanding is,
“
race
-based ill
will
”
(245c2
), a
“
commitment to opposing the advancement of those whose race she makes her enemy
”
(Ibid.)
.
Advantages: 1) accounts for development from attitude to action; 2) provides resources for better account of institutional racism; 3) cannot be extended to counter-racist attitudes or institutions.Slide16
What is Sexism?
Given this account of racism as
“race
-based ill will
,”
Garcia offers a definition of
sexism
as,
“…
sex-based disregard or ill
will” (247c1)
.
There are he suggests some important advantages to this account.
Makes it explicit that sexism is opposition to
women’s
interests.
Makes sexism obviously immoral.
Allows us to understand a particular form of sexism: sexist paternalism.Slide17
Sexist Paternalism
Sexist paternalism
occurs when it is argued that special consideration or limitations of their behavior is due women on the basis of their
“special
situation
.”
Like all paternalism, this type of justification of sex-specific treatment is vicious when,
“…
it is rooted in disrespect, a failure to regard and to treat members of one sex, as having the full rights and status that it is one of the marks of the virtuous to accord all
people” (248c2
).