The distinction between male and female genders is based
less on their physiological traits and more on their respective mindsets. These
mindsets, in turn, are a product of social expectations of behavior in a
cultural milieu. It is expected from male members of a society to behave in a
supposedly manly fashion and it is similarly expected from female members to
act in a purportedly feminine manner.
But this emphasis on binary distinction of genders in a
rural-agrarian setting served a purpose: the division of functions between male
and female members, where women were expected to do housekeeping and nurturing children,
while it was expected from men to produce food for the family. Although this
distinction is still maintained, to a lesser or greater extent, in urban and
industrialized societies, but a distinction based on division of functions is a
hypothetical imperative: as means to achieve certain ends and not an end in
itself.
Moreover, it would be normative to contend that in primitive
tribal societies, women had the same social status as men. The nomado-pastoral
and agricultural eras were the age of hunting-gathering, farming and strenuous
physical labor, and it is a known fact that women are physically a weaker sex,
that’s why we have separate sports and athletics events for men and women.
Women attained the status of equality after the onset of
industrial revolution and a shift to mechanized labor, when the focus shifted
from physical labor to intelligence and information; and when it comes to
cognitive faculties, women are just as intelligent as men, if not more so.
Notwithstanding, instead of taking a binary approach to classification
of genders, modern feminists now favor to look at the issue from the prism of a
whole spectrum of gender identities. The way I see it, it should not be about
being manly; rather, it should be about being human, which is the common
denominator for the whole spectrum of gender identities.
When we stress upon manliness, it’s not manliness per se
that we are glorifying, but the presence of feminine attributes in the
socially-elevated male gender is something that we, as agents of patriarchal
structure, frown upon. But such machismo is not a natural order of things,
because more than the physical attributes, the rigid segregation of genders is
a product of social constructions that manifest themselves in artificial
cognitive and behavioral engineering of male and female mindsets.
In our formative years, such watertight gender identities
and their socially-accepted attributes are inculcated in our minds by assigning
gender roles, but this whole hetero-normative approach to the issue of gender
identity is losing its validity in a post-industrial urban milieu, where gender
roles are not as strictly defined as they used to be in the medieval
agricultural societies.
More to the point, what are the virtues that are deemed
valuable in women separately from the ones that are deemed desirable in men? If
meekness, diffidence and complacency are disapproved in men, then why do we
have double standards for separate genders? Self-confidence, assertiveness and
boldness should be equally encouraged in both genders without discrimination.
However, the dilemma that we face is that the mindsets of individuals
and gender roles are determined by culture, but if the society itself is
patriarchal and male-dominated, then it tends to marginalize and reduce women
to a lower social status. Therefore, a social reform is needed which can
redefine "virtue" and the qualities that are deemed valuable in human
beings should be uniform and consistent for both genders.
Regardless, if we study the behavioral patterns in the
animal kingdom, a tigress is as good a hunter as a tiger; in fact, the females
of most species are generally more violent than their male counterparts;
because they fight not only for food, but also to protect their offspring. But
how often do we find a violent woman in human history and society?
Excluding a handful of femme fatales like Cleopatra, bold
women are a rare exception in human history. Thus, even though by nature, women
are just as assertive and violent as men, but the patriarchy-inspired nurture
and male-dominated culture have tamed women to an extent that they have unlearnt
even their innate nature.
Two conclusions can be drawn from this fact: first, that
it’s always nurture and culture which play a more significant role in
determining human behavior compared to some far-fetched concept of essential
human nature; and second, that essentially human nature is quite similar for
both genders, it’s only the behavioral process of social construction of gender
identity that defines and limits the roles which are deemed proper for one
gender or the other.
Additionally, regarding physiological distinction between
male and female genders, evolutionary biologists are of the opinion that such
differences only have a minor importance. Even if we take primary reproductive
organs, for instance, clitoris is regarded as a rudimentary penis in females
and nipples in males are regarded as rudimentary breasts, a fact which proves
beyond doubt that specialization of male and female reproductive organs is
merely a mechanism to keep genetic material unimpaired by preference for
meiosis division over repetitive and harmful mitosis reproductive division.
Moreover, it is generally assumed about males that due to
the presence of testosterone, they are usually more aggressive and competitive
than females. If we assess this contention in the light of global versus local
character traits theory, however, testosterone only promotes a specific kind of
competition: that is, competition for mating. When it comes to competing for
food, however, males and females of all species exhibit similar levels of
aggression and competition.
Therefore, it would be reductive to assume that the
distinction between male and female attitudes and behaviors is more
physiological and hormonal than it is due to the difference of upbringing and
separate sets of social expectations of behavior that are associated with the
members of male and female sexes.
Finally, there is no denying the fact that testosterone is
primarily responsible for secondary sexual characteristics in the males of all
species. Through the process of natural selection, only those males that have
succeeded in mating are able to carry forward their genes, which proves that
males with higher testosterone levels do have a comparative advantage in
competition for mating, but its effect on attitudes and behaviors of animal
species, and particularly in human beings with their complex social
institutions and cultures, is tentative and hypothetical, at best.
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