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Gender
Issues In Psychology (PSY -
512)
VU
Lecture
12
THEORIES
OF GENDER DEVELOPMENT
(3)
The
Psychodynamic Approach
Psychodynamic
approach is based on Freud's
theory of psychosexual development
Family
dynamics influence individuals at a
subconscious level and this leads to the
development of internal
gender
identities
Gender
Development:
Freudian
Perspective Psychosexual stages of
development take place with
possibility of particular conflicts at
different
stages. Gender roles develop as a
result of resolution process of
conflict at phallic stage
Feelings of
rivalry
and hatred develop against the father at
this stage. The father is
seen as stronger and
unconquerable; this
leads
to a conflict. The defense
mechanism of identification is used
for resolving the conflict. This
gender
identification
leads to sex-typed behavior
and development of gender roles.
Absence of a parent,
particularly,
the
same-sex parent affects the normal
process of gender development. Stevenson
& Black (1988): boys
with
absent
fathers around the oedipal stage show
less sex-typed
behavior.
Gender
Development Karen Horney's
Perspective
Karen
Horney reexamined some of Freud's basic
concepts. Although she
remained within the
psychoanalytic
paradigm,
and accepted the role of
unconscious as a driving force, she
digressed from Freud on
gender
differences
in personality development.
She
differed from Freud on the concept of
envy in females, their feelings of
inferiority, and
masculinity
complex;
whereby females express
masculine attitudes and
behavior.
She
also differed on Freud's
emphasis on early childhood
experiences, and the significance
that he attached to
the
role of biological
forces.
She
argued that the envy that
females have against males,
was symbolic, and did
not emerge out of a desire
to
physically
match them; instead it
represented a desire to attain the social
prestige and position that
men enjoy.
Horney
emphasized upon the significance of
social forces.
She
hypothesized that men envy
women's ability to reproduce
i.e., womb envy. According
to Horney, men
seek
and struggle for,
achievement because they are
trying to overcompensate for the
lack of ability to
reproduce.
In comparison to women, men feel
inadequate, and as a result they
attribute evil to
women.
In
order to deal with their
feeling of inferiority, men need to feel
more adequate, for which
they see women as
inferior.
Men's
feelings of resentment result in
attempts to weaken women and
leave women with feelings of
inferiority
and
insecurity
Unlike
Freud, Horney believed that females'
inferiority had origin in
male insecurity; she
disagreed from Freud
over
the idea that females feel
inferior because of a perceived
physical inferiority.
It
is men's behavior, and a
society with masculine bias
that generates females'
inferiority.
Contemporary
Psychodynamic Theories
The
feminist thought affected the Freudian
school of thought as well.
Psychoanalytic
Feminism
It
has roots in the work of Freud Gender is
not a biologically determined phenomenon.
Psychosexual
development
leads to the gender role
that we adopt and play.
Childhood experiences are
responsible for
making
the male believe that he is
masculine and a female
believe that she is feminine.
These experiences
lead
to
gender inequality. This situation is a
result of a male dominated
society.
Nancy
Chodorow (1979), a sociologist,
and Ellyn Kaschak (1992), a
psychologist, developed their versions
of
the
psychodynamic thought, which is
quite different from the
traditional Freudian approach.
Nancy
Chodorow's Theory:
39
Gender
Issues In Psychology (PSY -
512)
VU
Chodorow
(1979) focuses on early
childhood experiences with
mothers. She described pre-oedipal
stage where
children
identify with their mothers.
Girl child keeps association
with mother to become feminine.
Chodorow
(1979),
shared with Freud, pessimism about
gender equality. She, like Freud,
was pessimistic about
any
potential
equality between men and
women. However she departed
from him on the root cause
of inequality.
As
opposed to the Freudian emphasis on
males' and females' perception of
anatomical differences,
she
believed
in the impact of children's early
experiences with their
mothers. She proposed the idea of
the
significance
of the pre- oedipal period that occurs in
early childhood, prior to the
onset of Oedipus
complex.
She
proposed that the course of personality development
for males and females
was different. What
is
significant
is the fact that most, if not all,
children are mothered by a woman.
Women alone do not have
the
ability
of infant-care; however most nurturing is
provided by mothers/women, whereas
little caring is done by
fathers/
men. The bonding between
mothers and children in
early childhood has a deep
imprinted effect on
the
children. This effect, however, is different
for the male and the female
child. An infant's world is
centered
on
the mother. The mother- son
relationship is not as close as the
mother- daughter relationship; mothers
and
daughters
are closer since they are of
the same sex.
The
infants are unaware of the sex
differences, but the mother
is; and she is the one
who treats the male
and
female
children differently. A perception of
gender differences starts
emerging when children begin to
develop
a
sense of self. This process is
easier for the female child,
since she has already
identified with the mother,
and
now
this identification has to get
only stronger. However the boys
have a tougher task at
hand.
Having
lived in a mother- centered
world, and having already
identified with her, they
have to develop an
identity
separate from the mother.
The male child has to
face separation from mother
in order to develop his
gender
identity and to become
masculine. The development of self or
identity in boys involves
separation from
the
mother; and a rejection of their mother's
femininity. The gender similarity
between mothers and
daughters,
and
their difference from sons
affects emotional closeness.
Research has confirmed that
sons and daughters
are
different
in emotional closeness (Benenson, Morash,
& Petrakos, 1998).
When
the boys have to separate
themselves from mothers in
order to develop an identity of their
own, it has
deep
effects on their personality. They tend
to reject all femininity,
and develop a fear and
mistrust of the
feminine
(Chodorow, 1978). The development of a
sense of self in girls, and
growing into womanhood, is
smooth
and non- turbulent; they
have a close relationship with
their mothers. Their early
relationship with the
mothers
is reproduced when they themselves are
mothering their children. According to
Chodorow, the effort
on
part of boys to distinguish and
separate themselves from
mothers, results into the
worldwide denigration of
women
by men (Brannon, 2004).
Antigone
Phase: Kaschak's Theory
Kaschak
has borrowed the character of
Antigone from Sophocles'
Greek plays, just like Freud
borrowed the
character
of Oedipus. Antigone was
Jocasta's and Oedipus's daughter.
Antigone was Oedipus's care
taker,
companion,
and guide, after Oedipus
destroyed his eyes. Antigone
devoted her life and freedom to the
care of
her
father, and sacrificed for
him; Oedipus the height of
her devotion as his right.
Kaschak used the same
scenario
to explain the personality development and male up of
men and women.
Kaschak
acknowledges the usefulness of the
application of the legend of Oedipus in
Freudian theory, but
disagrees
with the way he treated
women in his concept of
female Oedipus complex.
Antigone
represents a typical good daughter in a
patriarchal family. Societies, in which
men are born, grown,
and
developed, grant power to them in the society as
well as in their
families.
As
part of this system and
process, men take women as
their possession. Women on the
other hand are born
and
developed in such a manner that they
consider themselves as men's
possession.
Their
position is always that of
subservience to men; and this is
reflected in their personality make up
and life.
"As
Oedipus' dilemma became a symbol
for the dilemma of the son, so
might that of Antigone be
considered
representative
of the inevitable fate of the good
daughter in the patriarchal family"
(Kaschak, 1992).It is
not
possible
for many men and
women to resolve these conflicts
because the societies are
formed and structured
in
such
a manner that they maintain a constant
state of male power and autonomy on
one hand, and
female
subservience
on the other.
As
a consequence, men treat women
not as independent people, but as
extensions of themselves. Men want
to
gain
power, and they do it in a self-
centered manner; this may
end up in causing harm to
others, especially
women,
by means of family violence and
other such behaviors. In a
research on family violence,
Johnson
40
Gender
Issues In Psychology (PSY -
512)
VU
(1995)
concluded that the cause
underlying indulgence of some
men in family violence is the feeling
that they
have
a right to do so. For a normal
course of personality development, women should
resolve the Antigone
phase.
But if they fail in doing
so, then they "allow
themselves to be extensions of others
rather than striving
for
independence". When women start
believing like this, then they
are also learning that their
own wishes are
not
important; it is only men
who are important. This
belief makes them impose
limitations on themselves,
thus
living a limited life. They
deny their physicality, and
try to make their bodies
invisible; this may be
observed
in the development of eating disorders. This situation
may result into the development of
self- hatred,
or
shame. In such cases women
may develop a need to establish
form relationships with others so
that a feeling
of
self- worth is
attained.
41
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