Gende*-Bending Anth*opological Studies of
Transcription
Gende*-Bending Anth*opological Studies of
!"#$"%&'"#$(#)*+#,-%./.0.)(120*3,4$("5*.6*7$412,(.# +4,-.%859:*+;<*3,2;=213.4%1":*+#,-%./.0.)<*>*7$412,(.#*?42%,"%0<@*A.0B*CD@*E.B*F*8G"1B@*HIII9@*//B*FFH&FFJ K4=0(5-"$*=<:*'021LM"00*K4=0(5-(#)*.#*="-206*.6*,-"*+;"%(12#*+#,-%./.0.)(120*+55.1(2,(.# 3,2=0"*NOP:*http://www.jstor.org/stable/3196139 +11"55"$:*HQRDQRQDDI*DD:FD Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=black. Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission. JSTOR is a not-for-profit organization founded in 1995 to build trusted digital archives for scholarship. We work with the scholarly community to preserve their work and the materials they rely upon, and to build a common research platform that promotes the discovery and use of these resources. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. Blackwell Publishing and American Anthropological Association are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Anthropology & Education Quarterly. http://www.jstor.org Gender-Bending Anthropological Studies of Education AMY STAMBACH Universityof Wisconsinat Madison Anthropologicalstudies of gender have shifted focus in the past four decades. The study of gender, anthropologistshave come to realize, goes beyond analysis of women, sex roles, and sexuality. We used to look at exotic kinship and marriagemodels, in which women served as objectsof exchange (L vi-Strauss1969),and we used to talk about universal sexual asymmetry as though it were a basis of social structure (Leach1977).Butthe focus today has shifted to examinethe ethnohistorical roots of gender ideologies and the historicaland materialcircumstancesthatshape genderrelationsin marketsand families(di Leonardo 1991;Ortner 1996).Indeed, many researchersnow focus on gender as metaphor,arguing that gender reflectsother aspects of culture:general values, relationshipsof power and authority,the creationand maintenance of group boundaries and identities (Lutkehaus1995;Strathem 1987). We who study education have been somewhat slow in making this analytic shift. Yes, our anthropologypredecessorstook gender into account, but even MargaretMead and EleanorBurkeLeacockargue that gender is about more than male and female social roles. Like others in FranzBoas'scircle,Mead (1928)urges anthropologiststo counterwidely held assumptionsaboutmale dominanceand female subservience.And Leacock(1978)argues that gender is not simply what men and women do or what boys and girls differentlyachieve in school;rather,it is a vehicle throughwhich people talkaboutwider formsof inequality.Several contemporarystudies frame"gender"in broad terms of social inequalities (see, for example, Holland and Eisenhart1990;Levinson 1998;Luttrell 1997).But much of the currentresearchin educationaljournalsand conferencestends to focus on girls'voices, women's teaching,and patriarchalauthority,themes thattypicallyreproduceNorth Americanreaders' cultural views about gender and education and present gender in socially staticand sex-specificways.1 The problem with defining gender in terms of sex roles and sexuality is that doing so perpetuatesWesternculturalassumptionsabout teaching, parenting,and the private-publicdichotomy. Studies thatexamine gendered divisions of labor often cast the home as a private space, the school as public,and women and men as normativelyinvolved in either one or the other.Sex roles and sexualitymight very well be importantin &Education 30(4):441-445. Anthropology Quarterly Copyright? 1999,AmericanAnthropological Association. 441 442 & EducationQuarterly Anthropology Volume 30, 1999 some of our ethnographicstudies,but focusing on them runs the risk of freezing women in particularlife stages and of overlookinghow boys and men are defined as age-gradedand gendered persons.Countering this literaturewith specifically"masculine-oriented"research,as is the currentturn in some areasof gender studies, reinforcesthe notions that sex is naturally dimorphicand that gender correspondswith biology, two presumptionsthat are crediblychallengedby recentanthropological researchon intersexuality(see Herdt 1994). What has happened?Are we sufferingfrom academicamnesia?Are we forgettingthat anthropologistswho wrote about gender and education in the 1970s-and earlier-were themselves wary of conceptualizing gender narrowlyas "whatmen and women do"?Are we forgetting that feminist anthropologistssince the 1970shave worked hard to illustrate how gender stands for inequalities throughout society as a whole-even for economic delocalization, as when we speak of the feminizationof poverty?Perhapswe are.But our own parochialismhas also driven us into an old-fashionedparadigm.Ournarrowfocus on the school has returnedus to think basically of gender as what girls and boys, men and women, do. "Sexrole selection"is oftenthe way U.S.educatorsand studentsthinkaboutgender,but it may not be the best way to approachour subjectanthropologically.As a framework,sex role selection may be appropriatefor sociological gender studies. I am thinking here of work thathas been done on the differentialacademicopportunities and outcomesfor girlsandboys (see Grantet al. 1994).Butfor an anthropology that seeks to understandhow gender is intertwinedwith all aspects of social life, it is possibly too narrow. As BarrieThorne(1993) notes, the fact that schooling structuressocial life along sex dimorphic lines is a phenomenonfor us to explain,not a startingpoint for anthropological research. In a 1984 special issue of Anthropologyand EducationQuarterly,the in- spirationfor this currentissue, GeorgeD. Spindlernotes thatthe focus of "currenteducationalanthropologyhas been so exclusively on the classroom,or at least on the school,thatthe culturalcontextualization,as well as the immediate community contextualization,is not developed in most publishedworks"(1984:7).His point might be extendedto anthropological writing on gender/education in the interveningyears,though it need not speak for all of it, nor for all of what is to come. It is not too late to carrySpindler'spoint even furtherinto gender/education studies. Doing so would connectour works to anthropologists'workin other cornersof our field. In light of changesgoing on aroundus, it seems timely and excitingto contemplatehow we might link gender and education to more general values embedded in social organization.We might, for instance, consider how the teacher-studentrelationshipreflectsgenderedrelationsof authority, discipline, and knowledge that operate in other social domains-the neighborhood,government,and home, for example. What Stambach Studies Gender-Bending 443 are the workingsof power at local, state,and nationallevels, and how do they link to gender inequalitiesin schools?Whatare the competinggender arrangementsin North Americanfamilies, and how do they intertwine with conceptualizationsof students'roles?Answers requirelooking at social life beyond the classroom. They may even involve consideringthat culturaltendenciesto emphasizegender differencesin schools conceal other inequalities;materialinequalitiesbetween social groups may be hidden by a culturalemphasison inequalitybetween the sexes. We might also ask how the past 30 years of strugglefor gender equity in U.S. educationrevealschangingculturalideas aboutpersonhoodand identity-a theme that moves us out of classroom ethnography yet keeps us firmlyrooted in issues of education.Why, for instance,has the subjectof sexual orientationrecentlyeclipsed questions of educational equity?Why are campuses and the media churningwith LGBTQissues but comparatively quiet on education and affirmative action for women?2Answers, I suspect, have to do with demographicshifts and with the representationof women in higher education,yet they also reflect culturaltendenciesto identify genderedpersonsin termsof sexuality and to think about sexuality in terms of power. This could be explored in connectionwith universitycampusculture. Finally, we might extend gender and education to the international scene and ask, How does gender provide a categoryby which we define-and defend-international human rights?How does the law protect women's rights,and how areuniversalgenderrightsunderstoodlocally? How do schools contribute to these understandings?Looking abroadwould furtherthe comparativeapproachthatMead and Leacock so effectivelydeveloped. Genderdoes not go away with these questions, but neitherdoes it stop with what men and women do. All of this is anotherway of saying that anthropologistsof education arewell poised at the excitingcrossroadsof genderand educationtoday. We are in positions to look at the ways gender links to conceptualizations of the educated citizen, the formationof human rights, and local discourses of power and authority.If we are to continue the anthropological projectthat Spindler envisioned-of connecting classrooms to communitiesand social worlds-we might push ourselves to reflecton how people use gender to speak about many aspects of social life. Even though people around the world are talking increasinglyabout gender as though it was a thing,genderremains,like cultureitself,largelyinvisible to "fish"who areswimming in it.3And even though some anthropological studies of girls' voices and teachers'maternalismeffectively reveal culture's hidden dimensions, the fact that we focus sometimes exclusively on them preventsus from seeing genderas a culturalheuristic forunderstandingsocialorganization.Thetime seems ripe,and exciting, to broadenour approach. 444 Anthropology& EducationQuarterly Volume 30, 1999 Amy Stambachis an assistantprofessorin the Departmentof EducationalPolicy Studiesat the Universityof Wisconsinat Madison,where she holds appointments in Women'sStudiesand AfricanStudies. Notes 1. Thereareexceptions,includingFine 1991,Fordham1996,and Lee 1997. 2. "LGBTQ" stands for lesbian, gay, bisexual,transgendered,and questioning. 3. HereI am paraphrasingClyde Kluckhohn,who writes, "Itwould hardlybe fish who discoveredthe existenceof water"(1949:11).This quote was provided and sharedby MaryBushnellon the Councilon Anthropologyand Education memberlistserv,February19,1998. References Cited di Leonardo,Micaela 1991 Gender, Culture, and Political Economy:Feminist Anthropology in HistoricalPerspective.InGenderat the Crossroadsof Knowledge:Feminist Anthropologyin the PostmodernEra.Micaeladi Leonardo,ed. Pp. 51-101. Berkeley:Universityof CaliforniaPress. Fine,Michelle 1991 Framing Dropouts: Notes on the Politics of an Urban Public High School.Albany:StateUniversityof New YorkPress. Fordham,Signithia 1996 BlackedOut:Dilemmasof Race,Identity,and Successat CapitalHigh. Chicago:Universityof ChicagoPress. Grant,Linda,PatrickM. Horan,and BettyWatts-Warren 1994 TheoreticalDiversity in the Analysis of Gender and Education.Researchin Sociologyof Educationand Socialization10:71-109. Herdt,Gilbert,ed. 1994 ThirdSex/Third Gender:Beyond Sexual Dimorphismin Cultureand History.New York:Zone Books. Holland,DorothyC., and MargaretA. Eisenhart 1990 Educatedin Romance.Chicago:Universityof ChicagoPress. Kluckhohn,Clyde 1949 Mirrorfor Man.New York:McGraw-Hill. Leach,Edmund 1977[1954] PoliticalSystems of Highland Burma:A Study of KachinSocial Structure.London:AlthonePress. Leacock,EleanorBurke 1978 Women's Status in EgalitarianSociety:Implicationsfor Social Evolution. CurrentAnthropology19(2):235-259. Lee,Stacey 1997 Unraveling the "Model Minority" Stereotype: Listening to Asian AmericanYouth.New York:TeachersCollegePress. Levi-Strauss,Claude 1969 TheElementaryStructuresof Kinship.Boston:BeaconPress. Stambach Studies Gender-Bending 445 Levinson,BradleyA. of Equalityat a MexicanSecondary 1998 StudentCultureandtheContradictions School.Anthropologyand EducationQuarterly29(3):267-296. Lutkehaus,Nancy 1995 FeministAnthropologyand FemaleInitiationin Melanesia.In Gender Rituals:FemaleInitiationin Melanesia.Nancy Lutkehausand Paul B. Roscoe, eds. Pp. 3-29. New York:Routledge. Luttrell,Wendy 1997 Schoolsmartand Motherwise:Working-ClassWomen's Identity and Schooling.New York:Routledge. Mead,Margaret 1928 Comingof Age in Samoa.New York:WilliamMorrowand Co. Ortner,Sherry 1996 Making Gender:The Politics and Eroticsof Culture. Boston:Beacon Press. Spindler,GeorgeD. 1984 RootsRevisited:ThreeDecadesof Perspective.Anthropologyand EducationQuarterly15:3-10. Strathern,Marilyn 1987 Introduction.In Dealing with Inequality:Analysing GenderRelations in Melanesia and Beyond. Marilyn Strathern,ed. Pp. 1-32. Cambridge: CambridgeUniversityPress. Thorne,Barrie 1993 Gender Play: Girls and Boys in School. New Brunswick,NJ:Rutgers UniversityPress.