Popular assumptions about gender and communication -
famously summed up in the title of the massively
influential 1992 bestseller 'Men Are From Mars, Women
Are From Venus' - can have unforeseen but far-reaching
consequences in many spheres of life, from attitudes to
the phenomenon of 'date-rape' to expectations of
achievement at school, and potential discrimination in
the work-place. In this wide-ranging and thoroughly
readable book, Deborah Cameron, Rupert Murdoch Professor
of Language and Communication at Oxford University and
author of a number of leading texts in the field of
language and gender studies, draws on over 30 years of
scientific research to explain what we really know and
to demonstrate how this is often very different from the
accounts we are familiar with from recent popular
writing.Ambitious in scope and exceptionally accessible,
The Myth of Mars and Venus tells it like it is: widely
accepted attitudes from the past and from other cultures
are at heart related to assumptions about language and
the place of men and women in society; and there is as
much similarity and variation within each gender as
between men and women, often associated with social
roles and relationships. The author goes on to consider
the influence of Darwinian theories of natural selection
and the notion that girls and boys are socialized during
childhood into different ways of using language, before
addressing problems of 'miscommunication' surrounding,
for example, sex and consent to sex, and women's
relative lack of success in work and politics. Arguing
that what linguistic differences there are between men
and women are driven by the need to construct and
project personal meaning and identity, Cameron concludes
that we have an urgent need to think about gender in
more complex ways than the prevailing myths and
stereotypes allow. |
|