Chapter 5 Introduction

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Sex, Gender, and Sexuality

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Gender Development

Human Sexuality

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CULTURES change, and their ideas about gender change also. Several decades apart, this text’s two authors had similar experiences with different outcomes.

In 1972, as the young chair of our psychology department, I [DM] was proud to make the announcement: We had concluded our search for a new colleague. We had found just who we were looking for—a bright, warm, enthusiastic woman about to receive her Ph.D. in developmental psychology. The vote was unanimous. Alas, our elderly chancellor rejected our recommendation. “As a mother of a preschooler,” he said, “she should be home with her child, not working full time.” No amount of pleading or arguing (for example, that it might be possible to parent a child while employed) could change his mind. So, with a heavy heart, I drove to her city to explain, face to face, my embarrassment in being able to offer her only a temporary position.

This case ended well. She accepted the temporary position and quickly became a beloved, tenured colleague who went on to found our college’s women’s studies program. Today, she and I marvel at the swift transformation in our culture’s thinking about gender.

In 2011, I [ND] experienced something quite different. We, too, were concluding our search for a new colleague. Our department faculty had assessed several candidates, and the top two vote-getters were a man and a woman. Our faculty hiring committee would make the final choice. Before they announced their decision, a senior committee member spoke out. “Look around the table. We’re all men. We need to consider that.” The accomplished woman was offered the position.

Our ideas about the “proper” behavior for women and men have undergone an extreme makeover. More and more women work in formerly male-dominated professions, and more and more men work in formerly female-dominated professions (England, 2010). Yet women still earn less than men. Women continue to struggle to reach the top of the ladder. In 2015, only 5 percent of the chief executives of Fortune 500 companies were women. And expectant parents in many cultures still hope for a son. Nevertheless, our views of women and men continue to evolve.

In this chapter, we’ll look at some of the ways nature and nurture interact to form our unique gender identities. We’ll see what researchers tell us about how alike we are as males and females, and how and why we differ. And we’ll gain insight from psychological science about the psychology and biology of sexual attraction and sexual intimacy. As part of the journey, we’ll see how evolutionary psychologists explain our sexuality.

Let’s start at the beginning. What is gender and how does it develop?