Dawn Dow, Katherine Mason
Acknowledgments
Katherine Maich, Gowri Vijayakumar
Author Biographies
Introduction: Conceptualizing Gender
Chapter 1: Power (Abigail Andrews)
The Gender Orders of Institutions
A History of Gender Hegemonies
The Ambiguities of "Progress"
Chapter 2: Position (Abigail Andrews)
Thinking through Difference: Beyond Universality and Objectivity
Standpoint Theory: A Sociology for Women
From Thinking Gender to Thinking Difference
An Epistemology of Difference
Chapter 3: Representation (Jennifer Carlson)
Imperial Advertising and Commodity Fetishism
Gendered Advertising and the Growth of Industrial Capitalism in the U.S.
Representing Hegemonic Masculinity
Marginalized Masculinities
Conclusion: Shifting Gendered Norms
Chapter 4: Practice (Jennifer Carlson)
From Gender Identities to Gender Practices
Interrogating the Science of Sexual Difference
Embodiment: Bodies as the Effect of Gender
Doing/Undoing Gender and Sex
Chapter 5: Gendering Sexuality (Oluwakemi M. Balogun & Kimberly Kay Hoang)
The Development of Human Sexuality as a Field of Inquiry
Early Feminist Interventions: Force versus Consent
Contemporary Debates around Sex Trafficking
The Politics of Sexual Rights: LGBTQ Rights Movement
From Sexuality to Sexualities: Power and Play
Doing Gender, Doing Sexuality
Sexualized Intersections: Sexuality, Race, Class, and Nation
Chapter 6: Gendering Crime and Justice (Jennifer Carlson)
From Violence against Women to Sexual Violence and Intimate Partner Violence
The Social Construction of Victims and Criminals
The Paradox of Women's Violence: Blurring Victimhood and Criminality
The Gender Gap in Violence: Men and Masculinity
Undoing Violence, Recognizing Gender
Chapter 7: Gendering Social Reproduction (Dawn Dow & Katherine Mason)
The Social Organization of Biological Reproduction: Historical and Global Perspectives
Adoption and Fosterage: Decoupling Biological Reproduction from Child-Rearing
Outsourcing Reproduction and Reproducing Inequality
Who is Responsible for Social Reproduction? Historical and Global Perspectives
What Does Reproductive Labor Entail?
Debating Reproductive Labor
The Stalled Revolution: Persisting Gender Differences in Reproductive Labor
The Mommy Wars and the "Opt-Out Revolution"
New Family Forms, New Forms of Social Reproduction? Legal and Technological Innovations
Chapter 8: Gendering Exploitation (Abigail Andrews and Raka Ray)
Gender Norms and Inequities in Today's Workplace
Occupational Segregation by Sex
The Glass Ceiling and the Glass Escalator
Explaining Sex Segregation at Work
Other Forms of Discrimination
Barriers to Union Organizing
Gendering Neoliberal Globalization
Gendered Migration and the Global Care Chain
The Global Factory and the New Feminine Worker
Microfinance, the “Responsible Woman,” and the Triple Burden of Public Service
Gender Transformations in the Informal Economy
Reconstructing Masculinities on the Margins
The End of Men? Or More Glass Ceiling?
Beyond the Gendered Economy
Chapter 9: Politicizing Gender (Gowri Vijayakumar and Katherine Maich)
Rethinking the History of Feminism: Waves and Currents
Nineteenth and Early 20th-Century Gender Activism in the United States
Feminisms in the United States during the 1960s and 1970s
The 1980s and 1990s: Critiques of White Feminism, Queer Politics, and Transnational Solidarities
The 2000s and Beyond: Institutionalization, Backlash, and New Directions
Chapter 10: Decolonizing Gender (Raka Ray)
Constructing the Global World Order
The Effects of Struggles around Decolonization
Colonial Positions and the Politics of Knowledge
The Geopolitical Construction of Gender
Contextualizing Our Concepts: Ideas Mediated by Culture
Olawakemi Balogun, Kimberly Hoang
References