Citations:genderscape

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English citations of genderscape

Noun: "the landscape or variety of gender within a particular context; the attitudes, roles, and beliefs about gender in a culture"[edit]

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  • 1999, Marc Robinson, The Theater of Maria Irene Fornes, page 85:
    The women gather in the house, "in the dark" (13), venturing forth only so far as a garden lawn near the house. There are three breaches of this divided genderscape: Emma's exuberant leap out the door to greet the men, the ominous invasion of dead leaves into Julia's bedroom, Fefu's catastrophic foray with the gun in the last scene.
  • 2000, Sarah Blaffer Hrdy, Mother Nature: Maternal Instincts and How They Shape the Human Species, page xi:
    During the years of my education and early career, the genderscape of the natural sciences was transformed by a broader inclusion of women.
  • 2001, Fiona Measham, Howard Parker, Judith Aldridge, Dancing on Drugs: Risk, Health and Hedonism in the British Club Scene, page 42:
    We will now discuss some of the issues surrounding the 'nocturnal genderscape' of British clubland in relation to gender, different sub-genres of dance music and the consumption of dance drugs.
  • 2003, Penny Holland, We Don't Play With Guns Here: War, Weapon and Superhero Play in the Early Years, page 24:
    I will now return to an exploration of how such prescriptive responses to gendered behaviours creates a genderscape in the early years classroom which can limit the options for both girls and boys.
  • 2004, Britta Zangen, Misogynism in Literature: Any Place, Any Time, page 63:
    Given his narcissistic Everyman to speak for all, Shakespeare utterly changes the genderscape on his stage.
  • 2005, Journal of Women's History, Volume 17, page 71:
    The new dan culture presented a complex gender landscape that early-twentieth-century Chinese popular culture was somehow plural enough to embrace. This complex genderscape reinforced and was reinforced by the spectacular dimension of dan.
  • 2008, Sudarshan Murty, Socio-Economic Participation of Women in Informal Sector, page 24:
    The contributors build a richly textured 'genderscape' of community resource rights in varied contexts; []
  • 2008, Jennifer Louise Simmons, "Gender, sexuality and HIV risk in Belize: A Mixed Methods Study", page 20:
    I gleaned information about the genderscape in Belize using both quantitative and qualitative methods.
  • 2009, Jane Mills, Loving & Hating Hollywood: Reframing Global and Local Cinemas, page 42:
    The notion of a 'screenscape' is an invaluable tool, for example, and a 'genderscape' proves indispensable when analysing not just women's cinema but all cinema.
  • 2011, Nick Krieger, Nina Here Nor There: My Journey Beyond Gender, page 88:
    His confidence was riveting, his sexuality fascinating. He dated the whole panorama of genders, he said; pansexual was the word he used. There was even space for me within the vast genderscape of his interests.
  • 2012, D. Ging, Men and Masculinities in Irish Cinema, unnumbered page:
    Thus, for example, in the 1990s, the mythopoetic strand of the American men's movement drew on ancient myths in order to argue for a natural, pre-ordained gender order, in spite of the fact that these myths derived from a patriarchal, feudal past whose genderscape was no more natural than the present one.
  • 2016, Jacky Kilvington & Ali Wood, Gender, Sex and Children's Play, unnumbered page:
    All adults who work with children will have their beliefs and every culture, organization, institution, home, peer group and so on will already have in existence, or will develop its own 'genderscape', i.e. an either implied or explicit code that supports particular ways of being and responding in relation to its members' gender.