WS 101 Reading & Study Questions For The Final Exam Women's Studies: Perspectives & Practices
WS 101 Reading & Study Questions For The Final Exam Women's Studies: Perspectives & Practices
1. Define feminism. What are two crucial aspects of any definition of feminism? What is meant by the term the personal is political? 2. Know the different waves and kinds of feminism (liberal, radical, lesbian/separatist, womanist, socialist, Marxist) and be able to compare them generally to each other. Explain how the strategies for change are different for liberal as opposed to radical feminism. What is meant by global feminism and why is it important today? What important conference occurred in 1995 that illustrated the power of global feminism? 3. What is feminist backlash? Why are groups involved in backlash against feminism? What is this perspective called? Be able to name some women resistant to the core principles of feminism. What term resulted from their work? 4. What changes have occurred since 1970, according to the reading A Day without Feminism? Are there any issues that were discussed in this article that still need attention today? Which ones and how might they be remedied? 5. According to Johnson in Guilt, Shame and Responsibility, what are the various reasons why men avoid taking responsibility for patriarchy? What kind of actions do men confuse taking responsibility with? What would taking responsibility look like? 6. According to Denials of Inequality, what is the popular perception of gender equality? Are there differences in perception for women and men? What does Rhode mean by self-interest in relation to men and gender inequality? According to Rhode, in what contexts are the denials of gender inequality most prevalent?
3. What does it mean to universalize the category woman? What does Hill Collins mean when she writes of additive analyses of oppression? On what two premises do additive analyses rest? 4. Be able to give examples of the institutional, symbolic, and individual dimensions of oppression. Discuss the three issues involved in reconceptualizing these systems and give an example of each. 5. According to Marilyn Frye in Oppression, how is the experience of being oppressed different from being limited? How does the double bind work in the context of systems of oppression? 6. What are some of the examples of white privilege that McIntosh lists in White Privilege and Male Privilege? Why does she call this an invisible knapsack? Explain the pattern running through the matrix of white privilege. 7. What is Yamatos definition of racism in Something About the Subject Makes Its Hard to Name? Be able to identify the four forms of racism she discussesaware/blatant, aware-covert, unaware/unintentional, and unaware/self-righteous. What are the differences between the different types of racism she writes about? 8. According to Kendell, what are the strategies for whites who want to be allies to people of color? What are the strategies for people of color working through internalized racism? 9. According to in-class discussion and Johnson in Shame, Guilt and Responsibility, what are the various reasons why men avoid taking responsibility for patriarchy? Men frequently confuse taking responsibility with what kind of actions? What would look like if men were to take responsibility? 10. What does Rhode, in her article Denials of Inequality mean by self-interest in relation to men and gender inequality? Give examples. In what contexts are the denials of gender inequality most prevalent? 11. Explain the ways members of target groups may come to believe in their own subordination and keep others in line. How does language function to maintain systems of inequality and privilege? 12. Explain in your own words Suzanne Pharrs discussion of the relationship between homophobia, heterosexism, and compulsory heterosexuality. What is lesbian baiting? What does a woman have to do to get called a lesbian and how do all women suffer from being labeled so?
13. How is homophobia related to a backlash to feminism? How is it related to problems within the womens movement? 14. What is the difference between gender consciousness and feminist consciousness? Why are some women afraid of feminism?
5. What are the reasons why women might stay in an abusive relationship? 6. How do the various forms of violence relate to male domination and misogyny?
Womens Work Inside and Outside the Home (Ch. 8 & related readings)
1. What is the relationship between expectations of gender, womens domestic labor, and the kinds of work women tend to do in the labor force? 2. Discuss the different kinds of sexual harassment. 3. Describe the differences between vertical and horizontal segregation and give examples. What is the glass ceiling? What is the gender wage gap? How much do women earn compared to men? How does this vary by race? What is comparable worth? 4. Explain the trends in womens workforce participation. What kinds of work do women tend to perform outside the home? What does pink collar mean? 5. How did African-American women fit into the cult of true womanhood? How are their experiences with paid labor and work environment different than that of white women? Families: Systems and Lives (Chapter 7 and related readings) 1. Explain the distinction between family as institution and family as experience. Discuss examples of power in the family and how power is organized by gender and other systems of inequality and privilege. 2. What is the political debate over family values? Why are feminists opposed to the neo-conservatives claim over family values? 3. Explain how the family is connected to other institutions and be able to give examples.
= 30 = 10
= 15 55