Gender Blur Summary

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Both Deborah Blum’s The Gender Blur: Where Does Biology End and Society Take Over? and Aaron Devor’s “Gender Role Behaviors and Attitudes” challenges the concept of how gender behavior is socially constructed. Blum resides on the idea that gender behavior is developed mainly through adolescence and societal expectations of a gender. Based on reference from personal experiences to back her argument up, Blum explains that each individual develops their expected traits as they grow up, while she also claims that genes and testosterones also play a role into establishing the differentiation of gender behavior. Whereas, Devor focuses mainly on the idea that gender behavior is portrayed mainly among two different categories: masculinity and femininity, …show more content…

This will eventually lead to the traditional expectations that woman is less superior than the men as the social expectations implies that woman should appear to be less aggressive than male whereas all they do is stay home and nurture the baby while them men work hard. Even in society today, many males are expected to be the ones working and earning money to support the family, while the woman stays at home with the housekeeping chores, as well as taking care of the family. Once again, Devor doesn’t mention any idea of biological relations. He believes that it is society itself that inputs the role into how woman react. Blum doesn’t disagree with the ideal traditional woman. Yet, she questions how would a little girl understand that she would have to grow up to satisfy the societal expectations that she was supposed to be fit to nurture and care for babies, as that is a woman’s social expectations. Biologically, a woman’s strong estrogen could lead to this desire whereas a high testosterone will focus primarily less on this

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