Gender Studies Degree, what is it and how to use it
A gender studies degree focuses on social hierarchies based on sex.
Pretty teenage student paying attention to lecture in classroom. Woman studying at the college classroom.
Gender studies is an interdisciplinary field of study that incorporates insights from the traditional humanities subjects, social sciences and physical sciences. (GETTY IMAGES)
Competing theories about gender and sexuality underlie many debates on hot-button issues like abortion, pay equity and transgender identity. Gender studies programs impart knowledge and skills that help in navigating gender-related controversies.
What Is Gender Studies?
“Gender studies gives language and voice to social inequalities, processes, conditions, arrangements, and rituals that can otherwise go unspoken and unnamed,” Deborah Cohan, a sociology professor at the University of South Carolina—Beaufort, wrote in an email.
Gender studies focuses on the ways gender identity and sexual orientation shape behaviors and feelings, and it investigates power dynamics that relate to sex. This field includes men’s studies, women’s studies and queer studies, and occasionally addresses widespread social concerns such as domestic violence. The academic discipline also investigates causes of sex-based discrimination and harassment and solutions to the problem.
“Research tells us that we learn what our culture considers ‘appropriate’ gender and sex roles by the age of two or three,” E. Michele Ramsey, an associate professor of women’s, gender and sexuality studies at Pennsylvania State University’s Berks campus, wrote in an email. “Thus, children feel pressure at a very young age to conform to expectations based on their perceived sex (or) gender and may limit themselves as a result of these expectations.”
Topics in Gender Studies Courses
Gender studies often focuses on expanding the scope of other liberal arts disciplines by examining materials that were previously overlooked because of their association with marginalized groups, according to some experts.
“It’s filling in the gaps for all the things that were left out when history and all of the fields were focusing more on men,” says Emily Meghan Morrow Howe, founder of the American Association of Corporate Gender Strategists, an organization that focuses on reducing workplace gender bias.
For example, a gender studies literature class may concentrate on the works of underappreciated women authors, says Howe, who frequently uses the nickname “Femily,” an allusion to her queer identity.
Howe notes that gender studies is similar to ethnic studies in its focus on the distribution of power in society and its examination of “the systems of privilege and oppression.”
Taryn A. Myers, an associate professor of psychology at Virginia Wesleyan University who teaches women’s and gender studies courses, says the field of gender studies provides relevant information for everyone, regardless of gender.
“For example, the same patriarchal factors that say women are weak and disregard women’s strengths also say that men cannot express emotion, which is linked to men’s mental health issues and the higher rates of death by suicide for men,” Myers wrote in an email.
Gender studies is an interdisciplinary field of study that incorporates insights from the traditional humanities subjects, social sciences and physical sciences.
“The topics really range,” Myers says. “For example, they might study a mental illness that disproportionately affects women, such as eating disorders or depression. They may study the role gender plays in electability of political candidates. They may study interpersonal gender violence and its repercussions.”
Misconceptions About Gender Studies
Some gender studies scholars and degree recipients say a frustrating myth about the academic discipline is that its mission is to denigrate masculinity. The field is not intrinsically antagonistic toward men, Howe says, because “everyone benefits without social norms forcing them into a box.”
Mark Justad, a member of the religious studies faculty at Guilford College in North Carolina and director of its Center for Principled Problem Solving, says gender studies offers many lessons about cultural ideals surrounding masculinity.
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