Tuesday, November 12, 2019
Where do Babies Come From? :: Sex Reproduction Essays
Where do Babies Come From? missing works cited Emily Martin argues that medical and scientific publications naturalize gender roles by presenting ââ¬Å"factsâ⬠that reflect socially constructed ideas about gender. This misrepresentation is reflected in much of the information intended to educate children about the ââ¬Å"factsâ⬠of life. Each of the pieces included in our course reader manifest this distortion to some degree. Because individuals begin to formulate ideas about gender at a very early age, such indoctrination is particularly precarious when presented during a childââ¬â¢s formative years. Feminists argue that Santa Claus, Sleeping Beauty and Snow White are also dangerous fictionalizations but depictions of stereotypical male/female roles presented to young people as serious, straightforward answers to important questions is far more sinister and the implications more dangerous to a society that values and espouses equality. Many of the tired old gender clichà ©s are used in all of the books in order to weave together an answer to one of lifeââ¬â¢s inevitable questions: ââ¬Å"Where do babies come from?â⬠In attempting to answer this question, even the most well-intentioned parent is bound to instill false ideas about gender if he or she relies on most of the popular literature that attempts to broach this difficult topic. Females and their roles in the sexual process are almost always represented as passive mothers, caretakers, supporters of malesââ¬âbeing acted uponââ¬âwhereas men are the actors, initiators, adventurers, rescuers--in fact, the only ones really doing anything at all. The father goes on to say that ââ¬Å"in bedâ⬠(an unnecessary assumption) a ââ¬Å"daddy puts his penis insideâ⬠the womanââ¬â¢s vagina, ââ¬Å"the sperm comes out of the daddyââ¬â¢s penis and goes into the mommyââ¬â¢s vagina, and then the sperm meets the egg and a baby startsâ⬠(Brooks). This typical description is repeated in another work with the ââ¬Å"man lying so close to the woman that his penis can fit into her vaginaâ⬠so that ââ¬Å"one of his sperms can get to one of her eggsâ⬠(Sheffield, 17). In a more euphemistic description a ââ¬Å"father bird puts his opening against the motherââ¬â¢s and sperm cells enter her and swim to the eggâ⬠and later ââ¬Å"a shell forms around the eggâ⬠(Zapun). Rather than initiated by the egg, this action is carried out by one of itââ¬â¢s parts or, one could argue, a completely distinct part. Another book, What To Expect When Mommyââ¬â¢s Having A Baby states only that ââ¬Å"the daddy puts his sperm inside the mommy,â⬠giving absolutely no clue as to how this is physically accomplished.
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