Where does gender express itself politically? What does gender mean,
in political terms, for women? Is it possible to study gender expressed in
and by individuals, across the aggregate, without dissecting the
methodological and normative assumptions of (at least part of) our
subfield?
In this Critical Perspectives section, Nancy Burns and Jane Junn speak
to these questions from distinctly different but intersecting viewpoints.
Both understand that the political meanings of gender are rooted in power
and powerlessness, in “systematic disadvantage and advantage”
(Burns, p. 104), and that our task as scholars is to explicate “when
social and political contexts can make gender relevant” (p. 105).
Both scholars speak primarily to gender in these essays, but also reflect
on race as well.
Nancy Burns considers gender in the aggregate and in the individual,
and maps how the relationship between the two might be explicated through
their interaction with a theorized political context. She delineates a
framework for understanding when and under what conditions “politics
enables gender to shape individuals' political actions and public
opinions” (p. 119). Using Burns's essay as a starting point,
Jane Junn cautions us that such a project will face inherent difficulties
that result from the conjunction of methodology and normative assumptions
that underpin the kind of research Burns advocates. Conceptions about the
individual and assumptions of “equality of agency among
individuals” (p. 125), Junn argues, not only obscure political
inequalities imbedded in gender but also produce unintended
consequences.