Sexual identity
Biological Determination: Fixed at birth
Social Construction: Emerges through social experience
Sexual relationships
Biological Determination: Are the natural expression of biological predisposition
Social Construction: Provide the basis for forming sexual identities
Social institutions
Biological Determination: Are based on "natural" sexual/social order
Social Construction: Support dominant group sexual identities
Social Change
Biological Determination: Social order relatively fixed with some individual variation
Social Construction: Comes as people mobilize social movements to establish rights for sexual minority groups
I probably made that look confusing, but I'm no good at making graphs (obviously).
Anyway, before you chime in, here's something interesting to consider:
So, what do you think? Do you think sex is biologically natural, or is sex learned? Perhaps that's a bad question. Rather, do you feel there is a biological basis for sexual identity, or do you think social experiences are far more significant?The Ethics of Research - Methodology Case Study
source text: adapted from Giddens, Sociology (1989:67) and Atkinson et. al. Psychology (1990)
Harry Harlow experimented in socialisation in the 1950s and 1960s by taking baby
rhesus monkeys from their mothers.
All material needs were provided for the baby monkeys, they were fed and given all
they needed materially.
The baby monkeys which were brought up in isolation from other monkeys
behaved in a very bizarre and unusual way.
When they were introduced to other monkeys, they were hostile or fearful and they
refused to interact. They spent their time huddling in the corners of their cages and
their posture was not dissimilar from that of humans who experience
schizophrenia.
The monkeys could not, or would not mate with other monkeys. Some females
were impregnated by artificial insemination, but they did not pay attention to their
young.
Monkeys raised in partial isolation where they could see other monkeys, but could
not interact were also unable to mate correctly. They did however masturbate
which showed that normal sexual function was in fact present.
Harlow refined his experiment to see if the mother was essential to the develop of
the social behaviour of the monkey. He brought up the babies in age group cohorts,
without access to adults who would provide a substitute mother. These monkeys all
behaved in a normal monkey manner.
Monkeys were reared in cages with feeders attached to substitute mothers. Each
baby monkey had two model mothers, wire and terry cloth. In groups, some wire
mothers were rigged to provide food, and some wire mothers were rigged to
provide food. In all cases, the baby monkey preferred the cloth mother regardless of
which provided food.