Essays about: "gender swap"

Found 2 essays containing the words gender swap.

  1. 1. Does swapping the race and gender of Communicators affect perspectives on Leadership & Securitization? Donald Trump and how people feel about his words coming out of other peoples mouths.

    University essay from Institutionen för tillämpad informationsteknologi

    Author : Enrique Carrion; [2017-10-26]
    Keywords : Securitization; Leadership; Ethnodrama; Symbolic Interaction; Donald Trump;

    Abstract : The purpose of this paper is to delve further into the social experiment undertaken by associate professor of economics and political science at Insead, Maria Guadalupe, and associate Professor of Educational theater at New York University Joe Salvatore, in their breakthrough ethnodrama gender swapping study titled “Her Opponent”, and see if through a quantitative analysis it showed us similar results, when the dynamics of not only gender swapping, but also race swapping were applied. The present research examines the perception of Donald Trump through the interpretive guides and theoretical lenses of Symbolic Interaction Theory, Communication leadership, Critical Theory of Communication in Organizations, and Securitization theory, to see if what Donald Trump says and his ideologies would be perceived differently, if what he says was stated by individuals of a different gender and/or race. READ MORE

  2. 2. DECONSTRUCTING GENDER - How to Teach Gender and Feminist Pedagogy using Stephenie Meyer's Life and Death in the EFL classroom

    University essay from Göteborgs universitet/Institutionen för språk och litteraturer

    Author : Sarah Ahlung; [2017-09-05]
    Keywords : feminist pedagogy; gender theory; gender swap; gender stereotypes;

    Abstract : Research done by The Swedish National Agency for Education shows students being treated and assessed differently. Various demands and expectations are placed on them based on their gender. Schools thus have a responsibility and a duty to counterbalance conventional and stereotypical gender patterns. READ MORE