Introduction Before I entered Manitoba College, I interpreted sex as a synonym of sex like many others. This misunderstanding stems from an increase in my experience in the French Catholic community that was taught to interpret men and women as a static bounded binary concept with two fixed choices. Therefore, I also began to understand multidimensional arrays of sexual identity, sexual expression and gender role. Non-dual gender expression exists worldwide, historians, sociologists, and anthropologists are documented.
Women played an indispensable role in the history of anthropology, but anthropology and gender or feminist anthropology appeared until the early 1970s. While the role of gender and gender was always an important part of any ethnographic research, contributors to this theory began to focus on the male-centered nature of anthropology itself. It is the prejudice of men that there is a big gap in information on women's research, and prejudice is seen as more prominent
Anthropology has long focused on sexual and gender issues. In this course, we will study current anthropological relationships between sexual behavior history and sexual behavior problems in anthropological history. Sexual and sexual problems are always a central issue in the development of anthropology and studies of "berdache" individuals in indigenous communities and marriage practices in the South Pacific are the earliest work. We will continue to follow this history, while studying how to reevaluate early anthropological studies on gender transbounds through homosexuality, serious race, and post colonial intervention. At the end of the course we will outline the participation of anthropology in sexuality and how this participation will create unique historical knowledge, critical sexual attitudes, and gender perspectives in the formation of the social world .
Feminist anthropology is aimed at anthropology (archeology, biology, culture, linguistics) aimed at reducing male prejudice in the reduction of survey results, anthropological recruitment practices, and academic knowledge It's a 4-dimensional approach. Anthropology often interacts with feminists from traditions other than Western Europe and their views and experience may be different from those of white European and American feminists. Historically, the view of this "surrounding" has been sometimes alienated and is thought to be less effective or less important than knowledge of western European countries. Feminist anthropologists argue that their research will help to rectify this systematic bias in mainstream feminist theory. Feminist anthropologists focus on gender-based societies. Feminist anthropology considers birth anthropology as specialization