WGSS 3998 Chapter Notes - Chapter 1: Phyllis Chesler, Naomi Weisstein, Radical Feminism

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As the women"s movement of the late 1960s made women and gender a central social concern, the field of psychology began to examine the bias that had characterized its knowledge about women. The more closely psychologists looked at the ways psychology had thought about women, the more problems they saw. They began to realize that women had been left out of many studies. Even worse, theories were constructed from a male-as-norm viewpoint, and women"s behavior was explained as a deviation from the male standard. Good psychological adjustment for women was defined in terms of fitting into traditional feminine norms marrying, having babies, and not being too independent or ambitious. When women behaved differently from men, the differences were likely to be attributed to their female biology instead of social influences (marecek et al. , 2002). Psychologists began to realize that most psychological knowledge about women and gender was androcentric, or male-centered.

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