Introduction My aim is to insist that there is a clear difference between the lifestyle of sex in most spaces and how to view them in various spaces to provide evidence of assertion. Lifestyle differences can be divided into various spatial scenarios that can be divided into two categories. These categories are as follows. Family / private space City / public space Private space can be defined as domestic space.
Everyone needs their own personal space. Different people, different cultures, different sexes maintain different personal spatial standards, some are more than that, others are not. Personal space reflects our way of thinking and emotion. Those who are interested in personal space will find that comfortable personal distances require different spaces; it also depends on social conditions, gender and personal preferences. People like doctors and patients need such personal space as they are uncomfortable and puzzled when a female patient meets a male doctor who is treating a particular female illness. Therefore, the personal space between the doctor and the patient is very important
Space and location reflects and affects not only gender by itself, but also, if present, the way gender is composed and understood. From the perspective of identity and space, the restriction of women's movement is a very important subordinate in the cultural context. Furthermore, on the one hand, both space mobility restrictions, consignment / restriction attempts in certain places, and identity restrictions on the other are both essential 21.
Elina Mannerhovi, University of Tampere, School of Modern Language and Translation, English Linguistics, Dissertation, Spring 2008
Iowa State Ames - Gender is an important part of our identity and is usually defined by our psychological difference between men and women. Of course, these differences are reflected in many gender stereotypes - men rarely share emotions, but women are emotional - but Iowa State University researchers believe that men and women are actually me They say that they are more similar than they think. Zlatan Krizan, associate professor of psychology at ISU, stated that the gender stereotypes may influence beliefs and have a totally different impression. Associate Professor Ethan Zell of North Carolina University Greensboro and Sabrina Teeter of Western Carolina University graduate student combined more than 100 gender meta-analyzes to separate the facts from fiction. To summarize, their comprehensive research includes more than 12 million people.