Gender Communication Are men from Mars and Women from Venus?

Post on 17-Jan-2016

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Transcript of Gender Communication Are men from Mars and Women from Venus?

Gender Communication

Are men from Mars

and

Women from Venus?

You Just Don’t Understandby Deborah Tannen

Males Females

Guise of Oppositionone-upsmanship

Guise of Connectionone-down

Focus on Statusavoid failure

Focus on Involvementavoid isolation

Focus on Independence Focus on Intimacy

Logical - thinkers Emotional-feelers

Problem-Solvers Gift of understanding

Sex and Gender Differencesin

Personal Relationships

• Gray’s motivation is $$$$$$$• 18 million from book sales

• $35,000 per seminar

• Claims are grossly exaggerated• use of anecdotal information

• Polarizing men and women offensive• creates greater distance

Moving Beyond Stereotypes

• Stereotypes become standards of behavior

• Bi-polar contructs essentialize “male” “female” qualities

• Behavior - Attitude Discrepancy

• Result - little social or scientific payoff

Understanding sex/gender requires more than stereotypes

Putnam (1982)

• Stereotypes do 2 things:

• a way to predict male/female behavior

• way to establish a baseline for expectations

about others

• Makes life simple and easy to explain

Canary & Emmers-Sommer Claim:

• Stereotypes do not adequately/accurately represent men/women’s interactions in personal relationships

• traditional view is outdated which distorts interactions

• people sometimes rely on stereotypes as guidelines for interaction-attitude behavior discrepancy

Defining Terms

• Sex - biological

• Gender - psych, social, cultural

• Sex role identity - degree to which one’s self is linked to biological differences

• Gender role identity - degree to which one’s self concept connects to psych, social, cultural understanding for males and females

Fear/Emotionin Personal Relationships

• Men - withdraw in close relationships and avoid discussion about relational issues

• Women - express feelings with more confrontational / hostile affect.

• Both experience fear about relationships– identification w/ gender role relates to

expression of fear

Similarities in Emotion

• Both bristle at unfair treatment

• Both avoid verbal venting of sadness

• Happy men and women both experience

closer and more satisfaction in reltshps

• Temperment (personality types) indicate

differences - not sex

Love, Sex, Intimacy

• Men and Women 82% similar

• Males/females-don’t subscribe to conventional, traditional gender roles

• Dwell on experience of LOVE• romantic dependency, compatibility,communal love

• Traditional Couples• less inclined to express feelings of closeness

• discuss intimate details of relationship

Both communicate

intimacy

through touch

DisclosureDual career Partners

• Both disclose to achieve/decrease intimacy

• high levels of SD resulted in more

relational satisfaction

• Both reported NOT disclosing for fear of

presenting an unwanted image

Romantic Involvements

• Both similar in willingness to sacrifice goals for relationship

• Both engage in sex to establish relational intimacy

• Women more likely to engage in sex to achieve emotional intimacy

• Men more likely to engage in sex for casual physical involvement

Clark, 1990

• Males or females approached opposite sex and propositioned him/her with a request to go to subject’s apartment

• RESULT - men significantly more likely to comply with the request.

• Male “Green-light” - Female “Red-Light” Phenomenon

Are there more similarities than differences

between men and women?