Leigh A. Arnold curates this group show of «of women artists whose work focuses on challenging
traditional gender expectations, role - reversal, and Feminist / post-Feminist sensibilities.»
Push back against
traditional gender expectations that encourage girls to be nice at all costs.
The long internalization of
traditional gender expectations shapes people's consciousness even as they begin to reject or live beyond those expectations.
Not exact matches
Katie Hovencamp Katie Hovencamp's work displaces
traditional constructs of
gender, «beauty» culture, and
expectations on the female body, shattering their implications on contemporary society.
She studied visual art and dance at California State University at Los Angeles and through a special graduate program traveled to Japan, a complex experience informed by Japanese post-WWII perceptions of America, ritual
expectations of
gender roles, and liberation found in
traditional and experimental Japanese art - making approaches and techniques.
Despite the idea that there are more egalitarian
gender roles in heterosexual relationships, this research indicates more
traditional attitudes for the first date — there are higher
expectations for men to initiate, plan and pay for the date.1 According to this work, the vast majority of which focuses on first date scripts held by heterosexual undergraduate students, both men and women think that men have greater sexual
expectations and are more likely to make a sexual move on the first date.1, 2
Two examples of these «deal breakers» could be strong differences in religious beliefs, or
gender role
expectations — that is, where one person wants a
traditional husband and wife relationship whereas the other person wants a progressive, egalitarian relationship.
Gender - based
expectations within marriage vary across social contexts, yet
traditional expectations regarding «women as nurturers» were particularly common for members of the CLOC sample, most of whom were born in the 1920s, and who married and started families in the 1940s and 1950s.