Lesson 14
Lesson 14
Lesson 14
LESSON OBJECTIVES:
This module discusses the many faces of men and masculinities. It also discusses themes
of masculinity and its relationship with well-being, fathering, domestic roles, and drug and
alcohol use. This module finally deals with hegemonic, protest, and caring masculinities. At the
end of this module, you are expected to:
1. understand fully men's studies and the constructs of masculinity;
2. know fully the themes of masculinity and its relationship with well-being, fathering,
domestic roles, and drug and alcohol use; and
3. comprehend hegemonic, protest, and caring masculinities.
DEFINITION OF TERMS:
Masculinities - a social, cultural and historical construction of men dependent on and
related to other factors such as class, ethnicity, sexuality, age, and disability
Hegemonic masculinity - form of masculinity which is culturally dominant in a given
setting
Protest masculinity - form of masculinity which is culturally dominant in marginalized
setting
Caring masculinity - proposes that men are able to adopt what is viewed as traditionally
feminine characteristics.
Introduction
Since 1970s, studies on different aspects of manhood (from men in the labor market to
men in the family and violent men, etc.) were made. By the 20th century, the number of these
studies increased dramatically.
A growing body of literature theorizing men and masculinities focuses on a variety of
topics including men's violence, fatherhood, pornography, men's crimes, female masculinity,
male femininity, etc. These studies arose despite the clear dominance of men over global
economic and political power. Men make up a large majority of corporate executives, top
professionals, and holders of public office. Worldwide, men held 93% of cabinet-level posts in
1996 and most top positions in international agencies (Gierycz 1999).
Essentialist views of gender are still popular and are constantly reinforced in the media.
However, they are increasingly under challenge, not only in biology (Fausto-Sterling 1902) but
also in everyday life. The rise of the women's liberation movement, and many feminisms that
have followed on from it, produced a massive disturbance in the gender system and people's
assumptions about gender.
Large numbers of men now acknowledge that their position is under challenge, that
what they once took for granted about must be re-thought, making men’s studies, and
masculinity became popular.
MASCULINITY THEMES
Masculinity is a social, cultural, and historical construct dependent on and related to
other factors such as class, ethnicity, sexuality, age, and disability. Researches on men's
studies and masculinity established common themes which strengthened and developed this
evolving concepts.
1. Multiple Masculinity
Accordingly, there is no one pattern of masculinity that is found everywhere.
Different cultures and different periods of history, construct masculinity differently.
Some cultures make heroes of soldiers and regard violence as the ultimate test of masculinity.
Others cultures look at soldiering with disdain and regard violence as contemptible.
Some countries regard homosexual sex as incompatible with true masculinity. Others
countries think that no person can be a real man without having had homosexual
relationships.
The meaning of masculinity in working-class life is different from the meaning in middle-
class life and same goes among the very rich and the very poor. It is even possible that more
than one kind of masculinity can be found within a given cultural setting and within a specific
class.
This only shows that masculinities cannot be delimited to a sole definition or description
as various countries, culture, and levels in life view this concept differently.
3. Collective Masculinities
Gender structures of a society define particular patterns of conduct of individuals as
either "masculine" or "feminine". These patterns also exist at the collective level-in
institutions, such as corporations, armies, governments, and even schools. Masculinities are
also defined collectively in the workplace and an informal groups like street gangs.
Masculinity also exists impersonally in culture. Video games, for example, circulate
typed images of violent masculinity. Cinema and TV Shows portray stereotypes of masculinity
such as abandoning father, disgruntled student, abusive partner, and the drug convict
In sports, an aggressive kind of masculinity is created organizationally by its structure,
pattern of competition, system of training, and hierarchy of levels and rewards.
CARING MASCULINITY
The emergence of caring masculinities in many parts of the world has been assessed in
several reports since the early 2000s, all of them highlighting the virtuous impact of this
reshape in male identities and practices for gender equality improvements in societies
(Connell 2003; Norwegian Ministry for Children and Equality 2009; Scambor et al. 2013; Levtov
et al. 2015; Heilman et al. 2017; Santos et al. 2016; Wall et al. 2017).
After decades of women demanding equal rights and opportunities and for the end of
male domination and its harmful costs in their lives, caring masculinities arise as a strong ally
against hegemonic masculinity.
The concept of a caring masculinity proposes that men are able to adopt what is viewed
as traditionally feminine characteristics (ie, emotional expression, sensitivity, domestication,
interdependence, caring, etc.) without departing from or rejecting masculinity (Elliott 2015;
Miller 2011).
Caring masculinities can be seen as masculine identities that exclude embrace the
affective, relational, emotional, and interdependent; a critical form of men's engagement in
gender equality because doing care work requires men to resist hegemonic masculinity and to
adopt values and characteristics of care that are antithetical to hegemonic masculinity (Elliot
2016).
So, besides the commitment to care work and gender equality, caring masculinities
entail a mindful refusal of hegemonic masculinity and inherent prerogatives (privileges,
domination, power), as well as of the plural manifestations of “complicit masculinity” that it
assumes (Aboim, 2010).
Men who approximate this form of masculinity are viewed as a form of “new man”
(Edley and Wetherell 1999; Smith 2016; Singleton and Maher 2004).
SUMMARY
Masculinity and men’s studies have been continuously developing from its inception
and up to present. These studies covered common themes of masculinities, different kinds of
masculinities such as hegemonic, protest, and caring masculinities and the relationship of
these masculinities to various aspects of life and the environment.