psychodynamic on gender development

    Cards (16)

    • what is the unconscious
      the part of the mind we are unaware of that directs behaviour
    • the parts in the tripartite personality structure
      • ID
      • ego
      • superego
    • what are defence mechanisms
      unconscious strategies that to ego uses to manage conflicts between the ID and the superego
    • psychic determinism
      unconscious forces and drives are inborn and control or determine behaviour
    • psychosexual stages:
      • oral ( 0 - 18 month ) - centred on the mouth
      • anal ( 18 - 36 month ) - focus on bladder elimination
      • phallic ( 3 - 6 years ) - focus on genital
      • latency ( 6 - puberty ) - sexuality is inactive
      • genital ( puberty + ) - sexual feelings towards others
    • freuds theory of gender development
      • before 3 years old gender identity is flexible as there is no clear difference between boys and girls
      • children are bisexual as they has no sense of being masculine or feminine
      • when children move up to the phallic stage, their understanding of gender begins to change
    • the phallic stage
      • lasts from 3 - 6 years old
      • focal point of pleasure is the genitals
      • they begin to pay attention to other people's genitals and thus begin to understand the physical differences between male and females
      • this is the start of children developing gender identity
    • what is the main force behind gender development
      the childs relationship with their parents
    • what are the two complexes
      oedipus and electra complex
    • oedipus complex:
      • all young boys develop a passionate desire for their mothers
      • they want to possess their mother for themselves
      • see their father as the rival , leads to jealousy
      • afraid their father will discover their desire for their mum and punish them by removing their genitals
      • this fear is known as castration anxiety
      • they view their father as more powerful than them
      • conflict = fear of father and lust for mother
      • resolution = gives up the lust and begins to identify with the father
    • electra complex:
      • all young girls develop a passionate desire for their fathers
      • they resent their mother as they realise they don't have a penis
      • they believe they had been castrated and blame their mother for this
      • girls experience penis envy as they are jealous they fathers / brothers have a penis and they don't
      • since they cannot have a penis they substitute this desire for the desire to have a baby so they begin to identify with their mother
      • fear = losing their mothers love
      • conflict = lust for father and fear of losing their mothers love
    • identifiation
      • towards the end of the phallic stage, children resolve their conflicts by identifying with the same sex parent
      • identification develops a superego as they adopt the same sex parents morals
      • identification develops the childs gender identity and their role as male or female
    • little hans - case study :
      • little hans = 5 year old boy who had become very afraid when he saw a horse fall on the street, as he assumed the horse was dead he became very frightened of them
      • this information was interpreted via the oedipus complex
      • suggested little hans had a sexual desire for his mother
      • the horse represented his fear of his father, whom he wanted dead
      • all communication was done via letter between freud and hans' father
      • freud only met hans a few times
    • inadequate account for female development
      • freud wrote vastly of the oedipus complex and stated women were a mystery to him
      • his idea of penis envy has been heavily criticised as reflecting the patriarchal and repressive victorian society in which he lived
      • his theory is culturally specific and penis envy is a cultural concept rather than an innate characteristic
      • his idea on female development is driven by the thought that females desire to be men, which is an androcentric assumption
      • thus, the theory is gender biased and culturally biased as well
    • being raised by a non nuclear family doesn't affect gender development
      • freuds theory relies on having two opposite sex parents so they have an effect on both the complexes
      • this would suggest that being raised by same sex parents would have an effect on gender development
      • however, evidence doesn't support this finding, research shows children raised in single parent families form normal gender identities
    • theory lacks scientific rigour
      • the psychodynamic approach is unscientific in its description of human behaviour
      • freuds concepts are subjective and impossible to scientifically test
      • thus , the theory is unfalsifiable as it cannot be empirically tested, so there isn't any evidence suggesting the unconscious mind actually exists
      • so we cannot provide any evidence that gender development takes place in the unconscious and that the electra and oedipus complex are factual instead of absract ideas
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