Originally published in 1976, Sexual Divisions and Society suggests that sociology has often included women completely within the term of 'men', or as a part of their husbands, rather than asking how and when the relationship between the sexes explans social structure and behaviour.
Sheila Allen, Diana Leonard Barker
Contributors Preface 1. Sexual Divisions and Society 2. In the Production of their Lives, Men (?)... Sex and Gender in the British Community Studies 3. Kin, Clients, and Accomplices: Relationships Among Women in Morocco 4. Continuities and Discontinuities in Marriage and Divorce 5. French Judicial Ideology in Work-Class Divorce 6. Women: Supporters or Supported? 7. Finishing School: Some Implications of Sex-Segregated Education 8. 'Who Wants Babies?': The Social Construction of 'Instincts' 9. I May Be a Queer, But at Least I am a Man: Male Hegemony and Ascribed Versus Achieved Gender 10. Women's Liberation, Reproduction, and the Technological Fix 11. 'Free-Choice Marriage' in China: The Evolution of an Ideal 12. Men, Women and Communes Name Index Subject Index