Open AccessBook
Passing By: Gender and Public Harassment
Carol Brooks Gardner
- 16 Aug 1995
346
TL;DR: Caroline Brooks Gardner as discussed by the authors explores the important yet little-examined issue of gender-related public harassment and concludes, provocatively, that gender-based public harassment exerts a powerful control over women's feelings of comfort.
read more
Abstract: Catcalls, wolf whistles, verbal slurs, pinches, stalking - virtually every woman has experienced some form of unwanted public attention by men. Off the street, in semi-public places such as restaurants and department stores, women often suffer the insult of being passed over by employees eager to serve men. How pervasive is this behavior? How dangerous can it be? And what, if anything, should be done about it? "Passing By", an illuminating, unsettling work, explores the important yet little-examined issue of gender-related public harassment. Based on extensive research - including in-depth interviews with nearly five-hundred midwestern women and men - it documents the many types of indignity visited on women in public places. As Carol Brooks Gardner demonstrates, these indignities cross all lines of age, class, and ethnicity and follow a typical pattern whereby a man or men take advantage of a woman's momentary or permanent vulnerability. Beyond describing the scope and variety of harassing behaviors, the book investigates the different ways women and men respond to and interpret them. Gardner concludes, provocatively, that gender-based public harassment exerts a powerful control over women's feelings of comfort in the towns and communities where they live and work. Further, she defines it as a new category of social problem that shares much in common with sexual harassment and, in its more menacing form, requires legal remedy.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Confrontation and loss of control: Masculinity and men's fear in public space
TL;DR: This paper explored the intersection of traditional, dominant masculinity and men's fear in public space, based on interviews with 82 undergraduate men students and found that for many men, public spaces and situations that challenge this masculinist identity may generate fear.
106
Social psychological theories on social inequalities
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyze patterns in social psychology's approach to social inequalities, which they argue has been characterized by neglect, a focus on difference rather than on similarity, a tendency toward essentialism, and a lack of attention to social context and power.
102
Patterns of Neighboring: Practicing Community in the Parochial Realm
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the practices and functions of neighboring and discuss four distinct patterns in detail: friendly recognition, parochial helpfulness, proactive intervention, and embracing and contesting diversity.
100
Producing Family Time: Practices of Leisure Activity Beyond the Home
TL;DR: In this paper, an observational study examines one site for public family activity, the community zoo, and shows that visiting the zoo involves the group in a routinized activity that reinforces significant social boundaries, including those of family membership.
96
Being Feared: Masculinity and Race in Public Space:
TL;DR: The authors examined men's experiences of being feared in public spaces and proposed strategies for challenging fear and the exclusion it supports, finding that fear is a key mechanism for justifying and maintaining race privilege and exclusion.
References
•Book
The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life
Erving Goffman
- 01 Jan 1959
TL;DR: For instance, in the case of an individual in the presence of others, it can be seen as a form of involuntary expressive behavior as discussed by the authors, where the individual will have to act so that he intentionally or unintentionally expresses himself, and the others will in turn have to be impressed in some way by him.
34.5K
Against our will : men, women, and rape
TL;DR: In this article, the authors trace the use and meaning of rape from Biblical times through to Bangladesh and Vietnam, unravels the origins of rape laws in medieval codes and examines interracial and homosexual rape and child molestation.
2.8K
Related Papers (5)
Erving Goffman
- 01 Jan 1959
Elijah Anderson
- 15 Jan 1992
Jane Jacobs
- 01 Jan 1961
Harold Garfinkel
- 01 Jan 1967