Psychological Study of Sex and Gender

PSY2240.02
Course System Home Terms Fall 2021 Psychological Study of Sex and Gender

Course Description

Summary

Why do people want to know about a baby's sex? How are children socialized into gender/sex binaries? How are gender roles created? How is gender/sex related to sexuality? What is it that we are attracted to in another person? Body frames? Masculinity/femininity? Having a penis or a vagina/vulva? How does gender/sex depend on other categories such as race/ethnicity, nationality, class, religion, and ability? How do interlocking systems of oppression (e.g. sexism, racism, classism, xenophobia, ableism) influence people’s lives? In this class, you will learn feminist theory and its empirical applications to scholarship in psychology by situating lived experiences of women, and sexual minorities in context.  You will develop media literacy by examining examples of pop culture, gain fluency in identifying the role of heteropatriarchal and racist institutions in social inequity and learn to think and write critically about gender/sex in its social, cultural, historical and political context. This course will follow a lecture and discussion format. Please note that you will meet together as a large group on Wednesdays for the lecture (max 45 people), and again as a smaller group (max 22 people) for extended discussion time with the instructor on Mondays (section 1) or on Thursdays (section 2). Adding this automatically signs you up for the Thursday discussion section.

Instructor

  • Özge Savas

Day and Time

Academic Term

Fall 2021

Credits

4

Course Level

2000

Maximum Enrollment

22