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Masculinity

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Everlasting33

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Masculinity certainly affects our society as a whole.

It is an coincidence that nearly every religion/faith in the world has a male god as the centerpiece? Male=strength, intelligence, power, protection. Human beings have created religion to match human society's feelings about men and women. Patriarchy is the primary expression of man's desire to maintain power and control over women and by placing masculinity on the higher end of ideal human behavior and feeling.
 
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PantsMcFist

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Masculinity certainly affects our society as a whole.

It is an coincidence that nearly every religion/faith in the world has a male god as the centerpiece? Male=strength, intelligence, power, protection. Human beings have created religion to match human society's feelings about men and women. Patriarchy is the primary expression of man's desire to maintain power and control over women and by placing masculinity on the higher end of ideal human behavior and feeling.

I think we can go farther back, and say that patriarchy is a societal response to the biological reality of being men and women - that men are stronger, and in times before language and more liberal social norms, strength was power.

Behaviorally though, there is a VAST range from culture to culture as far as ideal male scripts go. I don't think we can look at masculinity in general and say that one behavior or another necessarily belongs there.
 
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LittleNipper

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I ALMOST liked a post of yours *gasp*.. if you would have left the jab at the end out...

It wasn't a jab. It was a qualification. Any idiot can believe anything for whatever reason and convince himself of his own opinions, but it is different when a person stands back and is willing to read the handwriting on the wall and sees that it applies to himself and society at large. That involves inspiration and those convictions are supported by the Divine and not simply a crowd.
 
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Everlasting33

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I think we can go farther back, and say that patriarchy is a societal response to the biological reality of being men and women - that men are stronger, and in times before language and more liberal social norms, strength was power.

Behaviorally though, there is a VAST range from culture to culture as far as ideal male scripts go. I don't think we can look at masculinity in general and say that one behavior or another necessarily belongs there.


No doubt. I was discussing this with my sister and I firmly believe that if women were as strong as men we wouldn't have such a problem with patriarchy. However, although this is an explanation for patriarchy, it certainly doesn't excuse its motivations.
 
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PantsMcFist

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No doubt. I was discussing this with my sister and I firmly believe that if women were as strong as men we wouldn't have such a problem with patriarchy. However, although this is an explanation for patriarchy, it certainly doesn't excuse its motivations.

Our problem with patriarchy is really Europe's problem with patriarchy, which is based on the bible's problems with patriarchy.

There were many cultures that had shared power, and a few that were outright matriarchy. The problem is, is that Europe spread it's ideals through colonialism and Jesuit missions.

Right now I'm taking a course called Gender Construction in the Hebrew Bible, and there are quite a few surprises emerging regarding women's roles in those societies.

Women's ideal social roles broke down into three basic possibilities:
The Potential Wife - a virginal, innocent, usually adolescent girl. As a fact of life, you could only be this until married, which was usually before you turned 14 or 15.
The Realized Wife - a tireless, capable woman. Runs the household, oversees her husbands properties, raises and educates a large family, brings honor to the family name.
The Fantasized Woman - worldly, sexually experienced, dangerous(in the bad girl sense), often foreign, voluptuous.

What was interesting in examining these categories and the behaviors in them, was that women were fairly free to determine for themselves what category they fell into. In more modern (read liberated) times, we've been collapsing these categories into one model of femininity, which leads to less overall freedom in women deciding what behaviors and societal roles they incorporate into their lives. In no way does this deny the problems of patriarchy, but it does highlight the increasingly narrow gender role available to women.
 
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stan1980

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Like, why aren't men encouraged to show emotion? (Unless it's anger)

I don't think anger is usually encouraged. Some emotions I guess are discouraged so as not to show weakness.

Also, think about some of the images in the media of how masculinity is viewed.

I wouldn't know where to begin.

Why does it seem that men have to be portrayed as extremely violent?

Men don't have to be portrayed as extremely violent. Maybe you've been watching too many action films and let this slant your view, I'm not sure.. :confused:
 
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stan1980

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But I might add that the reason for that is that traditionally "masculine" qualities (bravery! strength! rationality!)

Yes these are normally encouraged.

are almost universally viewed positively, despite the fact that they have negative counterparts (recklessness, violence, coldness).

This is normally discouraged.


Meanwhile, traditionally "feminine" qualities (emotionality! weakness! gossip!) are still considered unseemly,

These are normally discouraged.

despite the fact that they have positive counterparts (sensitivity, gentleness, communication).

These are normally encouraged


Just a quick question, if the discouragement of "emotionality! weakness! gossip!" is misogyny, then is the discouragement of "recklessness, violence, coldness" misandry? Or does it only work one way?

Personally, I wouldn't jump to either conclusion too quickly here, but just interested in your thoughts.

I could certainly find some examples of misogyny in the world today, but maybe not quite in this way.

I think this is all a rather messy business, I'm not sure how much difference in male/female behaviour is learnt, how much is biological and what is the weight between what is encouraged/discouraged to individual sexes.

It's clear from reading through this thread, there isn't even much agreement on what masculinity is, and what men are portrayed as or what is encouraged/discouraged. It's all rather vague and subjective.

All these variables are making my head hurt :(
 
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PsychMJC

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It wasn't a jab. It was a qualification. Any idiot can believe anything for whatever reason and convince himself of his own opinions, but it is different when a person stands back and is willing to read the handwriting on the wall and sees that it applies to himself and society at large. That involves inspiration and those convictions are supported by the Divine and not simply a crowd.

You are damn right it was a jab. That added NOTHING to the comment whatsoever.

Any idiot can be given a book, be told it is divine, and then shut his ears to any other information.
 
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PassionFruit

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Masculinity certainly affects our society as a whole.

It is an coincidence that nearly every religion/faith in the world has a male god as the centerpiece? Male=strength, intelligence, power, protection. Human beings have created religion to match human society's feelings about men and women. Patriarchy is the primary expression of man's desire to maintain power and control over women and by placing masculinity on the higher end of ideal human behavior and feeling.


I understand what you're saying. Also I wanted to point out why many violent crimes are committed by men? Such as rape, murder, etc? I don't think this happened by accident. It makes me very uncomfortable when people say, "Well men are just naturally violent."


Just a quick question, if the discouragement of "emotionality! weakness! gossip!" is misogyny, then is the discouragement of "recklessness, violence, coldness" misandry? Or does it only work one way?

Personally, I wouldn't jump to either conclusion too quickly here, but just interested in your thoughts.

I could certainly find some examples of misogyny in the world today, but maybe not quite in this way.

I think this is all a rather messy business, I'm not sure how much difference in male/female behaviour is learnt, how much is biological and what is the weight between what is encouraged/discouraged to individual sexes.

It's clear from reading through this thread, there isn't even much agreement on what masculinity is, and what men are portrayed as or what is encouraged/discouraged. It's all rather vague and subjective.

All these variables are making my head hurt :(

I don't want to make your head hurt, stan. :) But since I really wanted to come at this from the angle of how the media defines and reinforces masculinity.
I would assume what is considered masculine would be assertiveness or even aggression is considered masculine.

But that's what I think should be explored, how much of our behavior is learned and how much of it is biological. Wikipedia has an okay article about how masculinity is defined. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masculine
 
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morningstar2651

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Anybody here heard of the men's movement?

Here are a few good books to check out from your local public library:
Iron John: A Book About Men
Fire in the Belly: On Being a Man
King, Warrior, Magician, Lover: Rediscovering the Archetypes of the Mature Masculine
The Alphabet of Manliness
Fire in the John: The Manly Man in the Age of Sissification

Okay...so that last one is a parody, and the last two aren't meant to be taken seriously.
 
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stan1980

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I understand what you're saying. Also I wanted to point out why many violent crimes are committed by men? Such as rape, murder, etc? I don't think this happened by accident. It makes me very uncomfortable when people say, "Well men are just naturally violent."


Testosterone is probably the main player here (at an uneducated guess! :p ). I think biological differences probably play a huge role.



I don't want to make your head hurt, stan. :) But since I really wanted to come at this from the angle of how the media defines and reinforces masculinity.
I would assume what is considered masculine would be assertiveness or even aggression is considered masculine.

But that's what I think should be explored, how much of our behavior is learned and how much of it is biological. Wikipedia has an okay article about how masculinity is defined. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masculine

Again, I think biological differences play a huge role.

If we could have an experiment, where 100 men and 100 women are put on an island from birth, and nurtured by some robots for the first say 6 to 7 years, who are completely impartial to the sexes as far as teaching goes, I'd imagine by the time the babies reach adulthood, we'd still see clear differences in behaviour between males and females. Maybe even more so than in the civilised world. The males and females wouldn't just pair off with each other, once the males get to an age where testosterone is kicking in, you'd get a situation where a handful of the men would become the alpha men, where they would maybe fight or even kill their weaker rivals off for their mate(s).

This is pure speculation on my part of course, but I wouldn't be that surprised if it is far off the truth. It would make a great reality TV show though :p
 
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morningstar2651

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I attribute a good chunk of this to our own flawed perceptions. We see what we're looking for and overlook what we aren't looking for. Is there a stairwell that you walk on regularly...possibly even daily? Could you tell me how many stairs are on it without going to count them?

On March 23, 1954, reports appeared in Seattle newspapers of damaged automobile windshields in a city eighty miles to the north. While initially suspecting vandals, the number of cases spread, causing growing concern. In time, reports of damaged windshields moved closer to Seattle. According to a study by Nahum Medalia of the Georgia Institute of Technology and Otto Larsen of the University of Washington (1958), by nightfall on April 14, the mysterious pits first reached the city, and by the end of the next day, weary police had answered 242 phone calls from concerned residents, reporting tiny pit marks on over 3,000 vehicles. In some cases, whole parking lots were reportedly affected. The reports quickly declined and ceased. On April 16 police logged forty-six pitting claims, and ten the next day, after which no more reports were received. The most common damage report involved claims that tiny pit marks grew into dime-sized bubbles embedded within the glass, leading to a folk theory that sandflea eggs had somehow been deposited in the glass and later hatched. The sudden presence of the "pits" created widespread anxiety as they were typically attributed to atomic fallout from hydrogen bomb tests that had been recently conducted in the Pacific and received saturation media publicity. At the height of the incident on the night of April 15, the Seattle mayor even sought emergency assistance from President Dwight Eisenhower.
In the wake of rumors of radioactive fallout and a few initial cases amplified in the media, residents began looking at, instead of through, their windshields. An analysis of the mysterious black, sooty grains that dotted many windshields was carried out at the Environmental Research Laboratory at the University of Washington. The material was identified as cenospheres-tiny particles produced by the incomplete combustion of bituminous coal. The particles had been a common feature of everyday life in Seattle, and could not pit or penetrate windshields.
Medalia and Larsen noted that because the pitting reports coincided with the H-Bomb tests, media publicity seems to have reduced tension about the possible consequences of the bomb tests-"something was bound to happen to us as a result of the H-bomb tests-windshields became pitted-it's happened-now that threat is over" (186). Secondly, the very act of phoning police and appeals by the mayor to the governor and even President of the United States "served to give people the sense that they were 'doing something' about the danger that threatened" (186).
 
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stan1980

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I attribute a good chunk of this to our own flawed perceptions. We see what we're looking for and overlook what we aren't looking for.

I agree. For example, if you want to look for why men are more aggressive, many will naturally look at the violent stuff on TV for an answer. They'll overlook all the non-violent stuff. It is easy to forget that violence is, by the norm, normally discouraged. There is plenty of TV and movie output where male characters aren't violent and show a more sensitive side. I think the media and films tend to more reflect how humans are, rather than shape how humans are (that's not to say the media doesn't have some sort of role in shaping us though). I'm not sure if this is what you were getting at, but just my thoughts.
 
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OphidiaPhile

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cantata

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Yes these are normally encouraged.

This is normally discouraged.

These are normally discouraged.

These are normally encouraged

Yes, most negative traits are discouraged to some extent, of course. But recklessness, violence, and coldness are not discouraged as masculinity or because they are masculine. If a woman is reckless, she is not accused of being like a man. If a man is over-sensitive, he may well be accused of being like a woman.

But you miss my central point, which is that the positive "masculine" qualities are at the heart of our cultural perception of "masculinity", while the negative "feminine" qualities are at the heart of our cultural conception of "femininity". If you watch an action film in which gender roles are vigorously enforced (without irony), for example, you are likely to see a brave, strong, laughs-in-the-face-of-danger male hero, and an over-talkative, needs-to-be-rescued, cries-when-she-breaks-a-fingernail female. It is clear to see that the "feminine" is held in contempt. We are ultimately supposed to admire the female when she takes on "masculine" characteristics - when she overcomes her fear, or makes a rational decision in a dangerous situation. You see "woman in peril" characters even in films that clearly think themselves quite progressive.

Just a quick question, if the discouragement of "emotionality! weakness! gossip!" is misogyny, then is the discouragement of "recklessness, violence, coldness" misandry? Or does it only work one way?

Personally, I wouldn't jump to either conclusion too quickly here, but just interested in your thoughts.

Neither is misogyny/misandry in itself. Discouraging negative traits is not discrimination or hatred. But as I said above, the problem is not in the discouraging of the negative traits. It's in the way that "masculinity" and "femininity" are viewed.

Women are encouraged to take on masculine characteristics, but the "new man" is an unpopular beast, arousing all kinds of suspicions about his sexual orientation.

I could certainly find some examples of misogyny in the world today, but maybe not quite in this way.

I think this is all a rather messy business, I'm not sure how much difference in male/female behaviour is learnt, how much is biological and what is the weight between what is encouraged/discouraged to individual sexes.

I might add that I'm not talking about anyone sitting their kids down and telling them they must be this or they can't be that. This stuff is really subtle. It's in our language (as BlackSabb rightly noted a few posts earlier), it's in our differing treatment of the same behaviours in men and women, &c.

And as feminists are always at pains to point out, broad, statistical gender differences, where they exist, are not enough to justify making assumptions about individuals. :)

It's clear from reading through this thread, there isn't even much agreement on what masculinity is, and what men are portrayed as or what is encouraged/discouraged. It's all rather vague and subjective.

All these variables are making my head hurt :(

That's fair enough, but I would point out that just because "the masculine" constitutes a complex set of expectations does not mean that it doesn't exist as an ideal. After all, what did you expect? :) It has to cover many aspects of human life.

Testosterone is probably the main player here (at an uneducated guess! :p ). I think biological differences probably play a huge role.

I do not think we're in much of a position to say that.

Most studies are conducted in a wholly Western demographic and do not account for cultural differences. It's possible that while, say, testosterone has x effect in ABC cultural conditions, it would have a completely different effect in PQR cultural conditions. Not enough cross-cultural studies have been conducted to show otherwise. And in any case, even if we did do a cross-cultural study, we don't get to choose from every possible culture, because patriarchy is the global norm. Maybe in a matriarchal society, testosterone would have a very different effect. I'm just speculating, and I'm not saying that it would have a different effect - but as I said, I don't think we're in a position to say for certain that there are biological gender differences which would exist in any cultural environment.

I agree. For example, if you want to look for why men are more aggressive, many will naturally look at the violent stuff on TV for an answer. They'll overlook all the non-violent stuff. It is easy to forget that violence is, by the norm, normally discouraged. There is plenty of TV and movie output where male characters aren't violent and show a more sensitive side. I think the media and films tend to more reflect how humans are, rather than shape how humans are (that's not to say the media doesn't have some sort of role in shaping us though). I'm not sure if this is what you were getting at, but just my thoughts.

As you know, I am one of the most reluctant people to point to the media as the reason for any effects, positive or negative, on gender differences or anything else. I actually think that, more often than not, the effects run in the opposite direction: the media provides the content that reflects the people who watch it.

But I don't think that either PassionFruit or I was talking about the media having effects on people, but about what the media portrayal of "masculinity", or the "masculine ideal" (rather than necessarily men) indicates about our views of masculinity and our expectations of men.
 
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Oneofthediaspora

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A strictly Darwinian evolutionist would suggest that masculine attributes are almost wholly the result of sexual selection. Those characteristics which the female of our species and their ancestors have found sexually attractive have been selected for and contribute to masculinity as we know see it.
So basically it's your fault :)

Personally I think that this is at least 50% b*llocks; but then I'm not a materialist.
 
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cantata

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A strictly Darwinian evolutionist would suggest that masculine attributes are almost wholly the result of sexual selection. Those characteristics which the female of our species and their ancestors have found sexually attractive have been selected for and contribute to masculinity as we know see it.
So basically it's your fault :)

Personally I think that this is at least 50% b*llocks; but then I'm not a materialist.

Er, a strict Darwinian evolutionist is not committed to that position at all.

Darwinians are not obliged either to attribute every characteristic directly to genes, or to discount the influence of cultural and environmental factors in individual differences.
 
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Oneofthediaspora

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You're correct, I was being flippant.
Allow me to expand a little.

Any genetic influence on masculinity from the Darwinian perspective is thought to be selected for mainly by sexual selection.
The really interesting and important question for the sake of furthering this discussion is how much masculine psychology is simply the phenotypic outworking of the genetic inheritance.
Very difficult question to answer or even address, although that hasn't stopped people conjecturing. Unfortunately, conjecture is all we have.
 
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cantata

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You're correct, I was being flippant.
Allow me to expand a little.

Any genetic influence on masculinity from the Darwinian perspective is thought to be selected for mainly by sexual selection.
The really interesting and important question for the sake of furthering this discussion is how much masculine psychology is simply the phenotypic outworking of the genetic inheritance.
Very difficult question to answer or even address, although that hasn't stopped people conjecturing. Unfortunately, conjecture is all we have.

Aha, okay. :) Fair enough. You're right, of course.

At the moment, evolutionary psychology is on a popularity upswing, and it doesn't surprise me. There are some big issues in psychology at the moment in which people are very reluctant to place what could be construed as blame on parents and guardians, and environment in general. Consequently, genetic and other biological explanations for various psychological phenomena are extremely popular.

However, I think we focus too much on these at our peril. I am personally of the opinion that the mind is much more easily changed and manipulated than evolutionary psychologists would like to make out. :) I honestly don't think that anyone is in a position to make grand, sweeping generalisations about the influence of genes, hormones, or any other biological factor when, as I mentioned in an earlier post, we simply do not have the opportunity for sufficiently varied cross-cultural studies to draw such conclusions.
 
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OphidiaPhile

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A strictly Darwinian evolutionist would suggest that masculine attributes are almost wholly the result of sexual selection. Those characteristics which the female of our species and their ancestors have found sexually attractive have been selected for and contribute to masculinity as we know see it.
So basically it's your fault :)

Personally I think that this is at least 50% b*llocks; but then I'm not a materialist.
Not in the least.
 
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