Power/Gender
Social Relations in Theory and Practice
Edited by:
- H Lorraine Radtke - University of Calgary, Canada, University of Calgary, Australia
- Henderikus J Stam - University of Calgary, Canada
March 1994 | 328 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
The connection between gender and power is at the center of current debates across the social sciences. This timely book assembles a distinguished international cast of contributors from social psychology, women's studies, sociology, management, political science, and the humanities to provide a broad-ranging analysis of the complex strands that inextricably link gender and power relations. This volume examines how gender is constructed through the practices of power and demonstrates how "female" and "male" are shaped not only at the microlevel of everyday social interaction but also at the macrolevel where social institutions control and regulate the practice of gender. Power / Gender explores the incorporation of gender relations and theories on power, the links between gender and political arrangements, and the socially constructed nature of gender. It also examines the connections between gender and power within the specific context of women's lives.
This interesting and original volume is essential reading for anyone in social psychology, women's studies, political science, management and sociology who seeks to understand why gender relations are power relations.
H Lorraine Radtke and Henderikus J Stam
Introduction
Marilyn French
Power/Sex
Karlene Faith
Resistance
Deborah Kerfoot and David Knights
Into the Realm of the Fearful
Hilary M Lips
Female Powerlessness
Jean Lipman-Blumen
The Existential Basis of Power Relationships
R W Connell
The State, Gender and Sexual Politics
Jill Vickers
Notes toward a Political Theory of Sex and Power
Celia Kitzinger
Problematizing Pleasure
Lorraine Weir
Post-Modernizing Gender
Michelle Fine and Pat Macpherson
Over Dinner
Wendy Hollway
Separation, Integration and Difference
Eliane Leslau Silverman
Women in Women's Organizations
Marianne LaFrance and Nancy M Henley
On Oppressing Hypotheses; or Differences in Nonverbal Sensitivity Revisited