Topic > Gender Roles and Race - 1408

Race is defined as descending from a common predecessor; one of the different variants of the human species. Furthermore, it is defined through your skin color and how you view other people. Race is not biological, but is a physiological factor that determines people's ability to exist in the United States. Racial classifications based on recognizable characteristics such as skin color, hair type, and body proportions. Races are not equal, but the question of race lies outside the linear scale of “lower” and “higher.” This trend is clearly on the decline, as bad products often make more money (Macintosh, American cars, junk food, fast food, cheap heroin), and with this kind of thinking ends a society's desire to improve itself , and is replaced by the desire to feel comfortable during decline: convenience. Race matters because it is courage for racism and racial discrimination. Race does not matter as a genetic idea. The idea or concept of race is that race is important because the perception of genetic homogeneity has been widely exposed. Furthermore, race, as a scientific concept, has never rested on solid scientific foundations. Biologically there are no pure and distinct races. This is not to say that there may not be biochemical differences between individuals. Some of these differences may be closely associated with the groups we classify by race. For example, in the film it is stated that some blacks have an extra muscle that helps them run faster than other people. If race doesn't genetically differentiate humans from each other, then why does it matter? Several studies document that “race” has been shaped by cultural, political, ideological, and legal functions in society. That is, “race” is a social construct; ...... middle of paper ......constant state of change, interacting with each other and therefore balancing the universe. It is because of the strong faith in this universal law, which decides the nature of the feminine and the masculine. This in turn results in the ancient gender stereotypes found throughout history. Men and women shoulder their responsibilities correspondingly according to the separation of natural gender characteristics. Gender stereotypes are reflected in various fields, such as marriage, family, politics and economics. In Asian countries, traditionally, a woman's role was to take care of household chores, such as serving her husband, taking care of children, and carrying out household chores such as cooking and cleaning. This type of woman was valued as "fair." Gender is considered the identity of each individuality and represents each character in a way to exist.