G - Psychodynamic explanation of gender development Flashcards

1
Q

What is the psychodynamic explanation of gender development?

A

Freud’s psychoanalytic theory

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2
Q

What are the 2 main concepts of Freud’s psychoanalytic theory?

A

Identification and internalisation.

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3
Q

Electra complex

  • When does it occur?
  • Describe it
A
  • Occurs during the phallic stage of development.
  • A girl blames her mother for her lack of a penis (penis envy), but eventually resolves this through a wish to have a baby and comes to identify with her mother and internalise female gender values.
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4
Q

Identification

A

A form of influence where an individual adopts an attitude because they want to be associated with a particular person or group.

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5
Q

Internalisation

A

Occurs when an individual accepts the attitudes or behaviour of another.

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6
Q

Oedipus complex

  • When does it occur?
  • Describe it
A
  • Occurs during the phallic stage of development.
  • A boy wishes his father dead because they are rivals for the mother’s love; this leads to anxiety, which is eventually resolved by identifying with the father and internalising the father’s gender identity.
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7
Q

When does gender development occur according to Freud?

A

During the phallic stage of development (the third stage).

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8
Q

What happens during the phallic stage?

A

A child’s libido (life force) is focused on his/her genitals.

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9
Q

At what age does the phallic stage occur?

A

3-6 years old.

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10
Q

How is the child’s gender identity resolved during the phallic stage?

A

Through the oedipus complex in boys ot the electra complex in girls.

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11
Q

Who proposed the oedipus complex?

A

Freud 1905

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12
Q

3 key components of the oedipus complex

A
  1. Boys desire their mothers. At the age of 3 or 4, a young boy becomes aware of his sexuality and desires his mother, wanting her sole attention.
  2. Boys then see their fathers as a rival for their mother’s love and, as a result wish their father were dead. This wish creates anxiety and a fear of castration. Such fears are repressed.
  3. The complex is eventually resolved because the boy begins to identify with his father. It is through identification with the father that a boy internalises his father’s gender identity and takes this as his own gender identity.
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13
Q

What does the gender identity the boy takes from his father lead to?

A

Masculine behaviour as young boys take on the attitudes and expectations of their fathers.

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14
Q

Who proposed the electra complex?

A

Carl Jung 1913

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15
Q

What is the electra complex concerned with?

A

A conflict between a child and same-sex parent because they are in competition for the opposite-sex parent.

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16
Q

What is the basic concept of the electra complex?

A
  1. A young girl is initially attracted to her mother but this ends when the girl discovers that her mother doesn’t have a penis. The girl blames her mother for her own lack of a penis, believing she was castrated, and so as a result she experiences penis envy.
  2. The girl’s sexual desires are transferred to the father.
  3. The complex is resolved when the girl converts her penis envy to a wish to have a baby, and this reduces her anger towards her mother. The girl can now identify with her mother and take on gender behaviours.
17
Q

Why is the end resolution less satisfactory for girls?

A

Because their identification with the same-sex parent is less strong - freud believed there was little reason for anyone to identify with a woman because woman had a lower status so why would anyone want to identify with them.

18
Q

In Freudian theory, how is each psychosexual stage resolved?

A

Through conflict.

19
Q

What does successful resolution lead to?

A

A healthy psychological outcome - in the case of the genital stage the healthy outcome is identification with the same-sex parent and internalisation of an appropriate gender identity and sex-role stereotypes.

20
Q

What leads to fixation at a particular psychosexual stage?

A

Frustration and overindulgence (or any combination of the two).

21
Q

What does fixation in the phallic/genital stage result in?

A

Results in a phallic character who is afraid of or not capable of close love.

22
Q

What did Freud believe the result of fixation could be the root cause of?

A

The root cause of amoral behaviour and homosexuality.