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As part of a larger multi-method study, 15 Black women college students participated in focus group discussions on the body. Contrary to popular theories that propose that Black women are protected by a “Black Culture” that buffers them from negative effects of body representations—thereby leaving them with higher body esteem—the themes that emerged in the focus group discussions indicate that young Black women are indeed feeling (1) pressures to be thin, (2) pressures from the preferences of men of diverse ethnicities, (3) competition with other Black women in the realms of beauty, and (4) a strong sense of being misrepresented by media images of thin Black women. These results not only indicate that body image issues are of real pressing concern to young Black women, but that psychological research methodologies may be adding to the misrepresentation of young Black women and their struggles. Qualitative methods must be utilized in order to hear more clearly the voices of Women of Color.
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Des grossesses précoces chez des jeunes adolescentes haïtiennes de Montréal entraînent des situations de crise qui touchent plusieurs familles, en plus d’interpeller et d’impliquer des intervenants de diverses disciplines. Le sujet, abordé dans un contexte transculturel, fait référence au biculturalisme haïtien, tant en Haïti qu’en terre étrangère. Dans cet article, l’auteur aborde plus particulièrement la situation des Haïtiens dans le contexte québécois. L’analyse de l’attitude des parents des deux groupes culturels, occidentalisé et créole, constitue une lumière médiatrice dans les relations d’aide ou d’intervention psychothérapeutique. Dans la communauté haïtienne, les problèmes d’identité culturelle d’une part, et, le manque d’affiliation à la famille, d’autre part, sont à la base des conflits entre parents et enfants. L’auteur conclut avec des propositions dans le but d’améliorer l’efficacité des interventions avec ces familles dans leur processus d’adaptation migratoire.
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Dans ce manuel de traitement de pointe, Lenore E. A. Walker soutient que les psychothérapies traditionnelles pour les victimes de traumatismes ont été insuffisantes pour traiter les femmes maltraitées. Alors que le problème de la violence à l'égard des femmes continue de tourmenter la société, couvrant tous les secteurs démographiques, Walker décrit des modifications essentielles à la pratique traditionnelle qui permettront aux praticiens de travailler plus efficacement avec les femmes victimes de violence. Ces modifications aboutissent à une compilation intégrée des stratégies d'évaluation et d'intervention les plus réussies, appelées « thérapie de survivant ». La thérapie des femmes maltraitées et des survivants discute des principales formes de violence subies par les femmes : viol et agression sexuelle, coups de feu, abus sexuels commis par des thérapeutes et discrimination/harcèlement sexuel sur le lieu de travail. Walker examine les effets du sexe, de la race, de l'ethnicité, de la culture et de l'orientation sexuelle sur chaque forme d'abus ; discute des considérations cliniques et des approches de traitement ; évalue les instruments d'évaluation couramment utilisés ; et analyse les problèmes médico-légaux dans les cas impliquant la violence contre les femmes. Walker soutient que les modèles de traitement réussis doivent tenir compte de l'impact spécifique des diverses formes d'abus, de la réponse psychologique unique de l'individu au monde, de l'impact de la socialisation traditionnelle des femmes et des hommes, et du transfert de thérapeutes et du contre-transfert. Ces considérations peuvent être appliquées au cours d'une thérapie qui cherche à réautonomiser les femmes maltraitées en les aidant à retrouver leur estime de soi, à rétablir des relations saines et à retrouver un sentiment de contrôle et de choix dans leur vie. La thérapie des femmes maltraitées et des survivants aide les praticien.nes nouvellement formé.e.s ainsi que le praticien.ne expérimenté.e à identifier, évaluer et traiter les femmes qui ont été maltraitées physiquement, sexuellement ou psychologiquement.
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À la lumière des connaissances actuelles en neurosciences, on serait tenté de croire que les vieux préjugés sur les différences biologiques entre les hommes et les femmes ont été balayés. Ce n'est manifestement pas le cas : médias et ouvrages de vulgarisation prétendent que les femmes sont " naturellement " bavardes et incapables de lire une carte routière, tandis que les hommes sont nés bons en maths et compétitifs. Ces discours laissent croire que nos aptitudes, nos émotions, nos valeurs sont tablées dans des structures mentales immuables depuis les temps préhistoriques. Cet ouvrage, qui s'adresse à un large public, replace le débat autour de la différence des sexes sur un terrain scientifique rigoureux, au-delà des idées reçues. L'enjeu est de comprendre le rôle de la biologie, mais aussi l'influence de l'environnement social et culturel dans la construction de nos identités d'hommes et de femmes. Notre destin n'est pas inscrit dans notre cerveau! [Source : d'après la 4e de couv.].
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This article draws on a qualitative research study which set out to explore women’s experiences and views of pornography within the broader context of conflicting feminist positions on pornography. The research methodology posed an implicit criticism of the kind of ‘findings’ familiar from mainstream psychological research: semi-structured interviews were conducted with women from diverse backgrounds in the UK, and feminist theory and discourse analysis were used to inform interpretation of their accounts. Although the question of feminism was not explicitly raised by the interviewer, it emerged as a recurrent theme in interviews, with interviewees suggesting that the feminist anti-porn stance in particular has influenced their perspective on pornography. Their accounts show that women’s experiences are variegated, individual and complex, and that discourses of pornography and feminism may be negotiated in unpredictable ways.
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The influence of culture and ethnic background on women’s experience of domestic violence has been explored in research only recently. Here the authors review research about the impact of culture and minority status in the United States on women’s experience of domestic violence, considering family structure,immigration, acculturation, oppression, and community response. The authors encourage researchers and service providers to acknowledge the effects on women of sociopolitical dynamics, including racism, and to identify specific aspects of culture that are relevant to intimate partner abuse.
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Un modèle d'identité butch contemporaine a été construit à partir de l'analyse d'une série d'entretiens semi-structurés avec des femmes identifiées comme butch qui ont décrit leur genre en relation avec leurs propres expériences et croyances. Le processus analytique impliquait une approche théorique fondée (Glaser & Strauss, 1967). Les résultats de l'étude décrivent comment les femmes identifiées comme butch conceptualisent leur identité de genre et comment cela affecte leurs relations sociales au sein des communautés lesbiennes et hétérosexuelles. La catégorie centrale de ce modèle (c.-à-d. Une quête d'authenticité) définit l'identité butch comme impliquant un processus continu de négociation entre un sens essentiel du genre lesbien et des exigences de présentation du genre qui sont comprises en relation avec la signification et la signification des genres à travers les contextes sociaux. . (Enregistrement de la base de données PsycINFO (c) 2019 APA, tous droits réservés)
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Les soins étant réalisés majoritairement par des femmes, on tend à considérer l’amour (des malades, des enfants) « naturel » et normal. Or, le travail de soin peut également générer de la haine envers les personnes dépendantes. Celle-ci n’est pas moins normale que l’amour et sa prise en compte modifie l’analyse des situations de soins. Pour l’heure, la haine est occultée dans les traditions savantes, en particulier dans les théories de l’éthique du dévouement, comme dans les témoignages des travailleuses, ainsi que le suggère une enquête réalisée auprès d’auxiliaires de puériculture. Il en résulte un déficit de visibilité du travail qui permet de conjurer la haine et la violence
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Some members of stigmatized groups, such as Asian women, may be more likely to experience negative self-evaluations after exposure to a mainstream beauty standard than members of other stigmatized groups, such as Black women. In this study, 54 Asian women, 52 Black women, and 64 White women, were exposed to mainstream standards of beauty and compared themselves to these idealized images. It was hypothesized that although Black women would find these comparisons irrelevant, Asian women would see these targets as relevant for their comparisons, reflecting their striving for mainstream beauty standards. The results indicated that Black women did not find mainstream standards as relevant to themselves, and reported positive self-evaluations generally and about their bodies in particular. Asian women, on the other hand, responded differently than Black women and were more likely to endorse mainstream beauty standards in a similar fashion to White women. As predicted, Asian women also experienced greater dissatisfaction with their bodies than did Black women.
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Personal advertisements placed by lesbians were examined to determine how often butch/femme descriptors were used: (a) as a form of self-identification or (b) to indicate the type of partner being sought. The 388 personal advertisements were drawn from 16 alternative newspapers around the U.S., as well as from one Internet site (Qworld) that contained personal ads by lesbians. Each advertisement was coded for the presence or absence of butch/femme descriptors. The majority of advertisers did not mention butch or femme labels either in terms of self-identity or type of partner sought. Among the minority of advertisers who self-identified as butch or femme, more described themselves as femme than butch. Among advertisers seeking butch or femme partners, femme partners were sought most often. Explanations for the preference for femme lesbians were explored
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Woman is a fascinating, fact-filled guide that covers everything from organs to orgasms, hormones to hysterectomies. With her characteristic clarity, insight, and sheer exuberance of language, bestselling author Natalie Angier cuts through the still-prevalent myths and misinformation surrounding the female body, that most enigmatic of evolutionary masterpieces. With a witty and assured narrative, and a reader-friendly dose of science, Woman is an essential and engaging resource for all time.
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This paper is on heterosexuals' use of words such as "fag" and "queer" to refer to one another in an insulting manner. This behavior perpetuates heterosexism and the stigmatization of gays. Two hundred and fifty-seven university students (73% Euro-American) served as participants. Males exhibited more anti-gay prejudice and anti-gay behavior than females. Heterosexual males frequently used words such as "fag" and "queer" to put one another down. Anti-homosexual prejudice was predictive of anti-gay behavior. However, approximately half of those who engaged in the behavior were not strongly anti-homosexual. For these individuals, the behavior may win approval from their social group. Awareness campaigns and peer reminders that the derisive use of "fag" and "queer" harms homosexuals may be effective in changing this group. It is more difficult to reduce this behavior in individuals with strong anti-homosexual attitudes. The role of individuals and educational and work organizations in bringing about change is discussed.
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The ways parents divide their roles after their first child is born is a particularly complex arena. The success of negotiations within this close personal relationship may be central to the future of the new family. Women and their partners were surveyed in late pregnancy and 6 months after the birth. Their attitudes to role division remained largely non-traditional after the birth, even though most of them had incorporated some traditional elements into their behaviour. Emotional support received from their partners was important to women's satisfaction with role division, which had fallen only slightly after the birth. Eight of the women were interviewed in depth to explore why it might be that satisfaction with role division tended to remain high after the birth, despite the division usually not being what they had hoped for. Contributory factors may include changes in emphasis in the division of breadwinning and the maintenance of overall responsibility for traditional role areas despite sharing of tasks.
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This article explores the relationship between identity, emotion, and feminist collective action. Based on interview research, the analysis confirms the central importance of anger in collective action and its particular significance for feminist identity and activism. As an emotion thought deviant for women, the anger inherent in feminist collective action frames created problems for participants in terms of relationships with partners, friends, and work colleagues. Participants performed emotion work to deal with negative responses to their feminist identity, but this depleted emotional energy and created stress. Participation in movement events provided much-needed emotional support and an outlet for deviant emotions.
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From the moment intersexuality-the condition of having physical gender markers (genitals, gonads, or chromosomes) that are neither clearly female nor male-is suspected and diagnosed, social institutions are mobilized in order to maintain the two seemingly objective sexual categories. Infants' bodies are altered, and what was "ambiguous" is made "normal." Kessler's interviews with pediatric surgeons and endocrinologists reveal how the intersex condition is normalized for parents and she argues that the way in which intersexuality is managed by the medical and psychological professions displays our culture's beliefs about gender and genitals. Parents of intersexed children are rarely heard from, but in this book they provide another perspective on reasons for genital surgeries and the quality of medical and psychological management. Although physicians educate parents about how to think about their children's condition, Kessler learned from parents of intersexed children that some parents are able to accept atypical genitals. Based on analysis of the medical literature and interview with adults who had received treatment as interesexed children, Kessler proposes new approaches for physicians to use in talking with parents and children. She also evaluates the appearance of a politicized vanguard, many of who are promoting an intersexual identity, who seek to alter the way physicians respond to intersexuality. Kessler explores the possibilities and implications of suspending a commitment to two "natural" genders and addresses gender destabilization issues arising from intersexuality. She thus compels readers to re-think the meaning of gender, genitals, and sexuality.
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Within feminism, battles over pornography have become the wars without end. Despite the controversy it generates, the discourses of anti-pornography feminism have continued to make inroads into legal frameworks, most recently in Canada. This piece surveys the growth and questionable appeal of such feminist campaigning, under the theoretical leadership of Catharine MacKinnon: its rewriting of feminist theory; its parasitic relation to the authoritative, phallocentric discourses of gender and sexuality; its alliance with the most reductive, behaviouristic psychology; its disavowel of fantasy and psychic life; its provocative mirroring of both the style and content of the `pornography' it deplores; its unwavering pursuit of legal remedies which enhance the power of state regulation of sexuality; its threat to subversive expressions of women's sexual agency and repudiation of any possibilities for sexual resignifications.
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"Taking on those who would limit sexual freedom, New Sexual Agendas challenges the notion that there are fixed sexual behaviors for men and women. This engaging collection draws on a number of disciplines including women's studies, literature, gender studies, cultural studies, history, politics, education, sociology, and psychology."
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In Fantasies of Femininity, Jane Ussher focuses on unraveling the contradictory visions of feminine sexuality: the fact that representations of the definition of woman seethe with sexuality yet for centuries women have been condemned for exploring their own sexual desires. In her quest for the sources of feminine representation, Ussher interviewed dozens of women - as well as some men - and combed popular media - from Seventeen to Cosmopolitan and Dallas to Donahue - to identify what shapes women's symbolic images of sex and femininity. Ussher argues that women have effectively resisted and subverted these archetypal fantasies of femininity, and in the process of so doing, reframed the very boundaries of sex. In this way, she exposes as myth much of what we think we know about "woman" and about "sex."
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En vue de comprendre les mécanismes menant à la réussite scolaire au secondaire, la recherche se penche sur les modèles d'identification qu'offrent, aux garçons et aux filles, les stéréotypes sexuels. Elle vérifie, à l'aide d'une enquête auprès de 24 écoles secondaires québécoises, le degré d'adhésion aux stéréotypes et son influence sur les rapports entretenus avec l'école. Elle démontre qu'un meilleur rendement scolaire passe par un affranchissement des modèles de sexe. Questionnaire en annexe.
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Looks at some of the key issues raised by a tradition of social constructionist work on homosexuality, focusing on the nature of heterosexuality, heterosexual self-identification and the relationship between heterosexual sexual behavior and sexual identity. Political and theorectical importance of a sustained analysis of the functions and utility of heterosexuality; Impact of social constructionist theory on research relating to lesbians and gay men.