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2021/2022

Gender, Spaces and Daily Life

Code: 105812 ECTS Credits: 6
Degree Type Year Semester
2503878 Sociocultural Gender Studies OB 3 1
The proposed teaching and assessment methodology that appear in the guide may be subject to changes as a result of the restrictions to face-to-face class attendance imposed by the health authorities.

Contact

Name:
Mireia Baylina Ferré
Email:
Mireia.Baylina@uab.cat

Use of Languages

Principal working language:
catalan (cat)
Some groups entirely in English:
No
Some groups entirely in Catalan:
Yes
Some groups entirely in Spanish:
No

Prerequisites

 

A good level of English is required, at reading and oral level.

Objectives and Contextualisation

For many centuries, half of humanity has been ignored as an object of study in the social sciences. Only forty years ago, thanks to the feminist movement and the evolution of the situation of women in society (employment, education, political participation, living conditions), the scientific process of making visible the other half of the world has developed. Geography has also been incorporated into this process, first observing and analyzing the differential patterns of women in their relationship with space and later recognizing the gender structure in society as a key element in understanding economic and social changes of  the contemporary world and the way the geographical environment is constituted and used by the population.

Geography has traditionally regarded society as a neutral, asexual, and homogeneous, without considering the profound differences between men and women in the use of space. Geography with a gender perspective argues that space is not gender neutral and this implies the need to incorporate social differences between men and women and territorial differences in gender relations to explain reality anywhere and at any scale. Both people and spaces have gender and social relationships and spatial relationships are mutually constituted. The courtse also considers the diversity of identities that are articulated with gender such as age, social class, sexuality, ethnicity and functional diversity.

The training objectives are as follows:

- Understand the definitions, basic concepts and objectives of geography and gender.

- Understand how the incorporation of the gender perspective alters and increases knowledge about the relationship between society and the environment.

- To be able to reformulate geographical research incorporating the gender perspective.

- Assess the introduction of this perspective in current geographical studies.

- To develop the capacity for reflection, analysis, discussion and interpretation, both individually and in groups.

- Understand the contribution of geography in gender studies and vice versa

Competences

  • Formulate, argue and discuss your own and others' ideas in a respectful, critical and reasoned way.
  • Incorporate the non-androcentric perspective in the work carried out.
  • Interpret and explain the history of gender relations, the significance of differences and the processes of generating inequalities in a context of globalization. 
  • Interpret gender inequalities in relation to sexuality, class, ethnicity and territory based on the concepts and approaches of sociocultural analysis. 
  • Students must be capable of communicating information, ideas, problems and solutions to both specialised and non-specialised audiences.
  • Students must have and understand knowledge of an area of study built on the basis of general secondary education, and while it relies on some advanced textbooks it also includes some aspects coming from the forefront of its field of study.

Learning Outcomes

  1. Distinguish the gender relations found in the processes of social exchange in the territory.
  2. Identify the main processes of social, cultural and gender change and their relationship with territorial transformations.
  3. Interpret the events of the current world based on gender, class, social and cultural diversity.
  4. Prepare an organized and correct speech, orally and in writing, in the corresponding language.
  5. Students must be capable of communicating information, ideas, problems and solutions to both specialised and non-specialised audiences.
  6. Students must have and understand knowledge of an area of study built on the basis of general secondary education, and while it relies on some advanced textbooks it also includes some aspects coming from the forefront of its field of study.
  7. Use the specific technical vocabulary and own interpretation of the required disciplines.

Content

The leitmotif will be the relationship of people with places in their daily lives, in public and private space and at various geographical scales: the body, the home, the workplace, the city, public space and the rural space and the nature. Given that places are the intersection between local and global processes in a given time and are therefore defined by the socio-spatial relationships that occur in them and distinguish them, a series of places will be analyzed where everyday life develops and different gender relations are created.

It is about examining the extent to which men and women experience places differently and showing that these differences are part of the social constitution of both place and gender.

Structure:

The contents of the subject are structured in 6 themes:

1. Gender and Geography: concepts, context and genealogy of research
2. Methods and methodologies in feminist geography
3. The body in space and the body as a place
4. Home and workplace
5. The city and public space
6. The rural space and the nature

Methodology

Course contents will be developed through oral classes from the professor, reading and discussion of the reading material, and two assignments (one individual and another in small group). 

 

Annotation: Within the schedule set by the centre or degree programme, 15 minutes of one class will be reserved for students to evaluate their lecturers and their courses or modules through questionnaires.

Activities

Title Hours ECTS Learning Outcomes
Type: Directed      
Practical classes 15 0.6 4, 6, 7
Theory classes 30 1.2 1, 2, 3, 6, 5
Type: Supervised      
Exam 5 0.2 4, 3, 6, 5
Individual and small group meetings 25 1 3, 5
Type: Autonomous      
Assignments 25 1 4, 7
Individual readings 25 1 1, 2, 3, 6
Individual study 25 1 1, 2, 3, 6, 5, 7

Assessment

The evaluation of the subject will be done continuously from three activities: Exercise 1 (20%), Exercise 2 (30%) and Examination of fundamental contents (50%). In order to be evaluated, you must take at least 2 of the 3 activities and one must be the exam.

An unrepresented assessment activity counts as 0.

Exercise 1 and Exam can be retaken. To apply for recovery you must have failed. The maximum grade in the recovery is 5.

The exercises and the examination of contents will be valued the capacity of analysis, the critical reflection, the personal contribution, the originality, the capacity of synthesis of the results, the clarity in the exhibition and the formal presentation.

In the event of a student committing any irregularity that may lead to a significant variation in the grade awarded to an assessment activity, the student will be given a zero for this activity, regardless of any disciplinary process that may take place. In the event of several irregularities in assessment activities of the same subject, the student will be given a zero as the final grade for this subject.

In the event that tests or exams cannot be taken onsite, they will be adapted to an online format made available through the UAB’s virtual tools (original weighting will be maintained). Homework, activities and class participation will be carried out through forums, wikis and/or discussion on Teams, etc. Lecturers will ensure that students are able to access these virtual tools, or will offer them feasible alternatives.

Assessment Activities

Title Weighting Hours ECTS Learning Outcomes
Exam 50% 0 0 4, 6, 5, 7
Exercise 1 20% 0 0 1, 2
Exercise 2 30% 0 0 4, 2, 3, 5, 7

Bibliography

BRU, Josepa (1997), Medioambiente: poder y espectáculo. Gestión ambiental y vida cotidiana, Barcelona, Icària/Antrayt, pp. 119-166 

BROWN, Gavin & BROWNE, Kath (eds.) (2016), Companion to Geographies of sex and sexualities, Abingdon: Routledge.

DATTA, Aniditta et al. (2019), Routledge handbook of gender and feminist geographies. London: Routledge

DOCUMENTS D’ANÀLISI GEOGRÀFICA, números monogràfics 14 (1989), 26 (1995, Dona, treball i vida qüotidiana), 35 (1999, Gènere i medi ambient) i 49 (2006, Geografia i gènere al món).

DOMOSH, Mona; SEAGER, Joni (2001), Putting women in place, London, Guilford Press

GARCIA RAMON, M.Dolors; BAYLINA, Mireia (eds.) (2000), El nuevo papel de las mujeres en el desarrollo rural, Vilassar de Mar, Oikos Tau

GENDER, PLACE AND CULTURE. A journal of feminist geography, Carfax Publishing

HANSON, Susan & PRATT, Geraldine (1995), Gender, work and space, London, Routledge 

MCDOWELL, Linda (1999), A feminist glossary of human geography, London, Arnold

MCDOWELL, Linda (2000), Género, identidad y lugar. Un estudio de las geografías feministas, València, Cátedra

MCDOWELL, Linda (2003), Redundant masculinities. Employment change and white working class youth, Oxford, Blackwell

OBERHAUSER, Ann et al. (2018), Feminist spaces: gender and geography in a global context, London: Routledge.

RODÓ DE ZÁRATE, Maria (2021), Interseccionalitat. Desigualtats, llocs, emocions. Manresa: Tigre de paper.

ROSE, Gillian (1993), Feminism and geography, Minnesota, University of Minnesota Press 

SABATÉ, Ana; RODRÍGUEZ, Juana María; DÍAZ, María Ángeles (1995), Mujeres, espacio y sociedad. Hacia una Geografía del género, Madrid, Síntesis

SILVA, J.M. et al. (2017), Diálogos Ibero-Latino-Americanos sobre geografías feministas e das sexualidades, Ponta Grossa: Todapalavra

von BENZON, Nadia; WILKINSON, Catherine (eds.) (2019), Intersectionality and difference in childhood and youth. London: Routledge

WOMEN AND GEOGRAPHY STUDY GROUP (eds.) (1984), Geography and gender. An introduction to feminist geography, London, Hutchinson 

WOMEN AND GEOGRAPHY STUDY GROUP (eds.) (1997), Feminist geographies. Explorations in diversity and difference, Essex, Longman

WOMEN AND GEOGRAPHY STUDY GROUP (eds.) (2004), Geography and gender reconsidered, CD 

http://igugender.socsci.uva.nl/newsletter.html (Newsletter de la Comissió de Geografia i Gènere de la Unió Geogràfica Internacional).

Software

MOODLE platform

TEAMS