Gender Stereotypes as Seen in Erica Silverman’s Jack (Not Jackie)
Abstract
This thesis focuses on how gender stereotypes are seen and used in Erica
Silverman’s Jack (Not Jackie) ((2018)), a children’s picture book about a little girl
named Jackie who defies gender stereotypes and wanted to be called Jack instead.
Gender stereotype is a generalization for how maleness and femaleness should be
done. It engulfs everything in day-to-day life, from how people wear their clothes
to their preferred jobs. Gender itself is an identity that is socially constructed, which
differs from the biological sex. According to Shahnaz, Fatima, & Qadir (2020).
gender stereotypes can potentially limit a person’s perception, view, and experience
of gender. In addition to that, rigid gender stereotyping can catalyze
transgenderism, where a person decides to be the opposite gender from their birth
sex.
The research question of this study consists of how gender stereotype is seen
in Jack (Not Jackie) (Silverman, 2018) and what is the critical position in the
discourse of the author of Jack (Not Jackie) (2018). The former uses Hall’s (1997)
constructionist representation theory to answer, unraveling the gender stereotype
that is represented in Silverman’s Jack (Not Jackie) (2018), searching for the
represented meaning in the construction of contexts surrounding it. Moreover,
Barthes’s (1967) semiotic sign theory is also used to dissect the meaning (signified)
behind the illustrations (signifier & sign) of this children’s picture book.
The author’s critical position in the discourse is found through the
interviews that the author has done on the internet. Seeing that the author, Erica
Silverman, is a part of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT)
community, her position is quite clear in the discourse, to support and give the trans
community a representation through this children’s picture book. However, it is
concluded to be unnecessary for children to be introduced to such a heavy topic that
can have a lifetime psychological and/or physical influence such as transgenderism.