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More Thinking About Gender: A Response to Julie A. Nelson

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 March 2020

Abstract

Nelson argues the best we can hope for in a nonsexist society is to revalue those feminine qualities that have previously been devalued. I argue that those qualities are the result of a sexist construction of gender categories, and that a nonsexist society would have no reason to preserve them.

Type
COMMENT/REPLY
Copyright
Copyright © 1994 by Hypatia, Inc.

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References

Bern, Sandra Lipsitz. 1991. Gender schema theory and its implications for child development: Raising gender‐aschematic children in a gender‐schematic society. In Gender roles: Doing what comes naturally?, ed. Salamon, E. D. and Robinson, B. W.Scarborough: Nelson Canada.Google Scholar
Connell, Robert W. 1987. Gender and power: Society, the person and sexual politics Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Miller, Jean Baker. 1976. Toward a new psychology of women Boston: Beacon Press.Google Scholar
Nelson, Julie A. 1992. Thinking About Gender. Hypatia 7(3): 138–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Piercy, Marge. 1976. Woman on the edge of time New York: Random House.Google Scholar