Author: Marcoux Jean-Sébastien
Publisher: Bloomsbury Journals (formerly Berg Journals)
ISSN: 1751-7427
Source: Home Cultures, Vol.1, Iss.1, 2004-03, pp. : 51-60
Disclaimer: Any content in publications that violate the sovereignty, the constitution or regulations of the PRC is not accepted or approved by CNPIEC.
Abstract
In the line of recent works on the relationship between body and gender, this article examines the bodily investment of gender construction. Grounded in an ethnographic fieldwork, it focuses on the ways in which gender relations in North America are constructed through the manipulation of objects, via body exchanges. It shows that physicality cannot simply be taken as a given on which genders are imposed. It is used to maintain sexual differences in a normative fashion. In attempting to understand this economy of body exchanges, this article calls for a broadening of our understanding of gender stereotypes. In doing this, it challenges the idea that changes of consciousness may not have reached the level of practices. It reveals instead that people are not fooled. They may even engage into these relations with a certain degree of irony.
Related content
By Macey Marie
Gender and Development, Vol. 19, Iss. 1, 2011-03 ,pp. :
Co-education and the erosion of gender stereotypes in the Zambian Copperbelt
Gender and Development, Vol. 22, Iss. 1, 2014-01 ,pp. :