Essay 1 (suggested due date: 3/2/21)

Instructions: For this first essay, please expand on your in-class writing, discussion board posts, and class discussion by responding to the following questions. Your essay should be about 500 words (2 pages double-spaced, in 12 point font). You can turn your essay in on Blackboard.

PROMPT: Following the model of the story by Ijeoma A.,  write about a lesson(s) you learned about gender expectations– it does not need to be a story about something that you yourself experienced but can be something that you witnessed or observed. If you write about something from your own experience, please be attentive to your own needs as you write and only write about something that you feel comfortable to think about and analyze in this assignment.

Describe the lesson: what did you learn? Where was the lesson taught and by whom? What was shared about the expectations and the consequences for not following the norm? What are your thoughts and reflections about these expectations and their impact?

What is the origin of these gendered expectations? What do they have to do with patriarchy, if anything? How does oppression play a role and if so, what kind?

 

 

Danny Washington: Essay #1

Gender expectations is a concept that has roots in the western patriarchal, eurocentric world. This concept is the belief that you must correspond with the gender you are born into with the expectations of that gender. To simply put it, men should act and dress like men and women should act and dress like women. However, there are many problems with this belief of gender expectation, or gender norms, because it isolates entire groups of people, communities, culture or subculture of people.

Since I’ve been a child gender expectations were throw at me. From the conversation between my mother and her friends, “He’s going to be a strong boy” “He is too cute the girls are gonna love him”, to the color of my room being blue, or way I choose to dance. These are all forms of gender expression and since a young age I’ve experienced a form of gender expression oppression. One memory that I have of gender expression oppression is when I was scouted by a ballet teacher for a school. During middle school, my school had an intensive where a outside school would come and scout for local talent for their school. At the end of the audition they would usually offer the parents of the child a scholarship to attend the school. I went through with the first rounds of auditions and was called back for the second round. My mother was ecstatic, she seemed to be more excited than I was at the time, my father however could not have looked more disappointed. I remember him purposely taking me to the auditions without my mother in an attempt to convince me not to take the scholarship. The entire was there he talked about how, “Boys don’t dance ballet” or “you want to wear tights like a girl”. These are things I remember because my young mind was extremely impressionable, especially since I was about ten or eleven. Nevertheless when I got to the auditions nevertheless I was excited, excited to display my talents, skills and to show them the choreography I was able to absorb. The auditions went well and I was offered to come to the school with a scholarship, this dreamed was shot down. When we left the place my father tried to convince me into not joining. It was the perception of me dancing ballet that bothered him. He equated ballet with queerness and queerness with weakness. My father’s expectation for me was to be a strong man, and “strong” meant the physical attributes; big muscles, football player, boxer, strong man. I started to notice after this incident my father becoming noticeably distant as I matured and became more expressive of myself.

As I matured, I myself noticed things that were seemingly odd. In the area I was raised, to be kind in nature was to be weak. Fighting became something that was common, this was a way to tell people, “I’m not soft, I’m not weak”. Fighting became the norm for young boys in the area. This is where I noticed the perception of black men start to grow for myself. We were seen as criminals, thugs and gangsters this is what surrounded us daily. How could little black boys escape this fate? I began to question myself and what I actually want from life. While I saw many interalize one perception of a black man, I also saw many people create for themselves a different image of a black man. Dennis Rodman, Prince, Jaden Smith and Sisqo and just a few examples of black men living outside the scope of gender expectation. All these men challenge in one way or another the norms for gender expressions and do not show obedience to the patriarchal masses. Jaden with his flamboyant attitude in the fashion scene choosing to wear a dress and model for a womens catalog. Dennis with his gender expression choosing to paint his nails and dye his hair various colors. While also exploring the scope of gender fluidity by wearing women’s clothing. It is not until we break from the binds of gender expectation that we can all be free and live in a world that is not more tolerable, rather than peaceful and acceptable.

Mariam Varazashvili Essay 1

 There I have got a lot of necessary and interesting information. There are articles that tell us about problems of women in our society. I am from Georgia and there is a caustic issue of women place in our society.  Step by step, minds of part of the new generation become more progressive but there are still problems about rights of women.

  I have read the article  ,,I want a wife” and I have remind our traditions of marriage. There are different sides in my country and every sides of Georgia have own traditions. I will tell about one traditions that is from SVANETI (mountain side of Georgia).  There are radically reduced rights of women. Children sometimes engaged form babyhood and sometimes 12-13 years old. Women must be virgin. After the first night, boy’s mother takes a sheet that is smudged with a blood and she hangs it on the balcony. They are proud that their bride is a virgin. In this case, If bridge is not virgin, boy will not marriage with she. That kind of girl will be shamed in the society. There women has some obligations in family: women must have more and more baby. Of course, she must have a boy who will be the main man in family. In this case, if  the woman does not have a boy, she is oppressed by members of family. Women must take care of children and husbands. They must wash legs of their husbands, clean house and everything; also cook dishes and women must do everything at home. Years ago, women and man did not eat together. The man is a head in family. They have not been allowed to set together on the table. The men could do everything; they used to think that men was right if he beats or humiliations his wife. Unfortunately, the woman from childhood thinks that the man is everything.

  The second example from our society is that women try to become leaders last 15 years. They start driving cars, they try to get education and find a job. Someone reached a high positions in different fields and the huge number of women are in migration and they earn money. They send it in our country and it is a big helping process for our economic system of country. Almost, there is a still patriarchal society. A lot of women are killed by husband who is just jealous. The woman must be virgin while she get marriage and etc.

  Step by step, there is changing mind of people; we hope that one day everything will change.

  I learn that women and men have equal rights. We must fight for our rights. I learn it from my daily life. Every day I see how is pressing the women by the men. I do not like it. My expectation is that after 15 years everything will change. There are opening borders. People travel in abroad and the young generation goes to abroad in order to get education, because of this I am sure that everything will change. Also, social media causes some changes.

  There is a serious problem about oppressing the woman; I think that a new generation must to do everything to change our society.