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Relationships between Men and Women
Various researches indicate that males and females typically communicate through different styles of interaction. Notably, women and men are biologically diverse, and evidence demonstrates a social distinction between the two individuals. Significantly, the patterns displayed in the cross-sex communication often reveal how both genders interact interpersonally. Additionally, in a conflict situation, the different characters between these sexes become more evident and are a common element of all relationships in the manner in which it gets handled for the survival of such connections. This paper explores how male and female characters relate to one another, if the relationship between them is the source of conflicts and whether such disputes can get resolved.
A spectrum of paradigms undertakes a separate female world, and that in which women are by nature way diverse from their men counterpart. In this regard, ladies are by nature distinctively different from men, who get to encounter different realities. However, other paradigms deny the assumption that women and men possess a significant character. For instance, research indicates that the post-modern feminism stress is on the exchange between the social constructions among individuals. It also focuses on the individual’s constitution of themselves (Jewkes 1585). In this case, expression of language, some symbols, different discourses, and even post-modern feminism indicates how social power get exercised, and also how the social relations regarding gender, race, and class can get changed. Notably, such an aspect does disregard the sociality of women’s experience including their distinction from men, considering the patriarchal system; women have different access to various discursive fields. In this view, therefore, men and women get characterized differently from one another, since they tend to assume and experience different issues in society, separating even their obligations as well.
Considering the differences exhibited among the females and males in society by nature, it can as well be attributed to the source of conflicts between their relationships. For example, sexual conflicts typically emerge from the differences in the evolutional interest of the males and females, and this can occur over traits related to their courtship, mating process and also fertilization through parental investment (Inoue 220). It is vital to point out that sexual conflicts can lead to sexually antagonistic coevolution, where a specific adaptation in one can tentatively lead to a counter-adaptation in the other, along with evolutionary changes among the species. Therefore, in this case, gender issues and the relationships between the males and females in the society is the source of conflicts between them since they have divergent beliefs, and perspectives along with experiences in the community.
Gender issues usually affect dispute handling mechanisms and the process employed to resolve such matters often fail since women are less effective than men in the process. Typically, women are more transferred literally, showing that women experience different perspectives, and therefore, their issues require different aspects to handle. Resolving such conflicts between the relationships of men and women is complicated since the outcomes from the two angles are different. However, at advanced approaches, such conflicts can get resolved since solutions are gender correlated, considering the genesis of the dispute.
In conclusion, males and females often behave differently and also perceive issues in various ways. They get characterized differently and more often; women experience severe problems as compared to men. The matters explored in the study include the relationships between males and females in the society, the sources of conflicts between them along with the possible mechanisms to resolve such disputes.
Works Cited
Inoue, Wakako, et al. “Are there different factors affecting walking speed and gait cycle variability between men and women in community-dwelling older adults?” Aging clinical and experimental research 29.2 (2017): 215-221.
Jewkes, Rachel, Michael Flood, and James Lang. “From work with men and boys to changes of social norms and reduction of inequities in gender relations: a conceptual shift in prevention of violence against women and girls.” The Lancet385.9977 (2015): 1580-1589.