女性气质锚:异性恋关系和怀孕是美国女兵骚扰的场所

IF 7.1 1区 社会学 Q1 SOCIOLOGY
Stephanie Bonnes
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引用次数: 5

摘要

本文通过对50名美国女兵的深入访谈,推进对性别、女性气质和骚扰的社会学理解。认识到女性在整个军事生涯中都是骚扰的目标,我分析了骚扰的具体事件,以检查组织和互动意义以及这些事件中嵌入的权力动态。这篇文章解释了为什么军人会升级对怀孕或进入异性恋关系的女性的骚扰。在一个已经贬低女性气质的军事化背景下,我认为男性将性别化和性化的含义强加于女性的生命历程事件,以限制女性在组织中的融入。这些事件,如怀孕、订婚或与异性恋伴侣结婚,就像“女性气质锚”一样,将女性束缚在一个超级男性化的环境中。当女性试图在美国军队的性别领域中航行时,女性气质锚给女性带来了严重的互动和个人后果。除了引发性骚扰和非性骚扰的时刻,女性化锚限制了女性作为真正的军人的接受,并对她们的军事生涯产生了负面影响。在强调女性气质锚定对女性的负面对待时,我展示了性别在组织中嵌入的具体方式如何塑造了骚扰和排斥的模式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Femininity Anchors: Heterosexual Relationships and Pregnancy as Sites of Harassment for U.S. Servicewomen
This article draws on in-depth interviews with 50 U.S. servicewomen to advance sociological understandings of gender, femininity, and harassment. Recognizing that women are targeted with harassment throughout their military careers, I analyze specific episodes of harassment to examine organizational and interactional meanings and the power dynamics embedded in these instances. This article explains why servicemen escalate harassment toward women who are pregnant or who enter heterosexual relationships. In a militarized context that already denigrates femininity, I argue that men impose gendered and sexualized meanings on women’s life-course events to limit women’s organizational inclusion. These events, such as pregnancy and engagement or marriage to a heterosexual partner, serve as “femininity anchors” that tether women to femininity within a hyper-masculine environment. Femininity anchors present serious interactional and individual consequences for women as they attempt to navigate the gendered terrain of the U.S. military. Aside from eliciting moments of elevated sexual and nonsexual harassment, femininity anchors restrict women’s acceptance as real servicemembers and negatively affect their military careers. In highlighting the negative treatment women receive due to femininity anchors, I demonstrate how the specific ways gender is embedded in an organization shapes patterns of harassment and exclusion.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
13.30
自引率
3.30%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: The American Sociological Association (ASA) is a non-profit membership association established in 1905. Its mission is to advance sociology as a scientific discipline and profession that serves the public good. ASA is comprised of approximately 12,000 members including faculty members, researchers, practitioners, and students in the field of sociology. Roughly 20% of the members work in government, business, or non-profit organizations. One of ASA's primary endeavors is the publication and dissemination of important sociological research. To this end, they founded the American Sociological Review (ASR) in 1936. ASR is the flagship journal of the association and publishes original works that are of general interest and contribute to the advancement of sociology. The journal seeks to publish new theoretical developments, research results that enhance our understanding of fundamental social processes, and significant methodological innovations. ASR welcomes submissions from all areas of sociology, placing an emphasis on exceptional quality. Aside from ASR, ASA also publishes 14 professional journals and magazines. Additionally, they organize an annual meeting that attracts over 6,000 participants. ASA's membership consists of scholars, professionals, and students dedicated to the study and application of sociology in various domains of society.
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