Gender, culture and power : challenging New Zealand's gendered culture /
James, Bev,
Gender, culture and power : challenging New Zealand's gendered culture / Bev James, Kay Saville-Smith. - Revised edition. - vii, 120 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm. - Critical issues in New Zealand society ; 2 . - Critical issues in New Zealand society (Auckland, N.Z. : 1993) ; 2. .
Cover and spine title: Gender, culture & power. "First [ed.] published 1989"--Title page verso. On cover: Second edition.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Editors' Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- What is it Really Between Cheeky Hobson and the Dog? -- Race, Class, and Sex: land and the struggle for power -- Creating a Gendered Culture -- The Contemporary Practice of Masculinity and Femininity -- The Costs of a Gendered Culture -- Vested Interests in a Gendered Culture -- Contesting a Gendered Culture -- References -- Index.
This is a further title in the series Critical Issues in New Zealand Society. Sex, race, and class are the major lines of exclusion and exploitation in New Zealand society. But how do they relate together? Why do they persist? In this book, the authors explore the notion that New Zealand is a 'gendered culture', a culture in which the structures of masculinity and femininity are central to the formation of society as a whole. However, they argue that the oppression of women should not be seen as the most fundamental dynamic of our society. Sex inequalities are not more important than other inequalities, nor should political action be concentrated solely on the struggle between the sexes. Rather, they argue that the gendered culture should be challenged because it enables the hierarchies of sex, race, and class to be maintained. Gender, Culture, and Power has been written for tertiary students as an introduction to gender and inequalities. However, its lively and accessible style and challenging analysis make it essential reading for all those interested in the relations between the sexes, the position of women, and the current direction of New Zealand society. This new edition contains updated statistics, and analyses the impacts on the gendered society of New Zealand's shift to a more market-driven society.
0195583213 9780195583212
95153719
Sexism--New Zealand
Equality--New Zealand
Discrimination--New Zealand
Social classes--New Zealand
HN930.5.Z9 / S64 1994
305.30993 305.0993
Gender, culture and power : challenging New Zealand's gendered culture / Bev James, Kay Saville-Smith. - Revised edition. - vii, 120 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm. - Critical issues in New Zealand society ; 2 . - Critical issues in New Zealand society (Auckland, N.Z. : 1993) ; 2. .
Cover and spine title: Gender, culture & power. "First [ed.] published 1989"--Title page verso. On cover: Second edition.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Editors' Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- What is it Really Between Cheeky Hobson and the Dog? -- Race, Class, and Sex: land and the struggle for power -- Creating a Gendered Culture -- The Contemporary Practice of Masculinity and Femininity -- The Costs of a Gendered Culture -- Vested Interests in a Gendered Culture -- Contesting a Gendered Culture -- References -- Index.
This is a further title in the series Critical Issues in New Zealand Society. Sex, race, and class are the major lines of exclusion and exploitation in New Zealand society. But how do they relate together? Why do they persist? In this book, the authors explore the notion that New Zealand is a 'gendered culture', a culture in which the structures of masculinity and femininity are central to the formation of society as a whole. However, they argue that the oppression of women should not be seen as the most fundamental dynamic of our society. Sex inequalities are not more important than other inequalities, nor should political action be concentrated solely on the struggle between the sexes. Rather, they argue that the gendered culture should be challenged because it enables the hierarchies of sex, race, and class to be maintained. Gender, Culture, and Power has been written for tertiary students as an introduction to gender and inequalities. However, its lively and accessible style and challenging analysis make it essential reading for all those interested in the relations between the sexes, the position of women, and the current direction of New Zealand society. This new edition contains updated statistics, and analyses the impacts on the gendered society of New Zealand's shift to a more market-driven society.
0195583213 9780195583212
95153719
Sexism--New Zealand
Equality--New Zealand
Discrimination--New Zealand
Social classes--New Zealand
HN930.5.Z9 / S64 1994
305.30993 305.0993