* I do not hope to solve any
problems or to give you any answers, I wish to *
provoke your thoughts, so that you can discover your own problems and find your own solutions to them.
provoke your thoughts, so that you can discover your own problems and find your own solutions to them.
Dear Macho Women and Femme Men,
To be shunned from society hurts, it
leaves confused feelings of being frightened and alone, unable to tell where
you can belong or who will accept you for who you were born to be. People who
see themselves as 'normal' people may use words like 'different', 'weird',
'trouble', or 'gay' when they talk about people who go against their ways of
normality. One lesson we should have learned from generations and generations
of history is that everyone is equal, but sill people are too fearful of things
that are 'different'. Today's generation is facing the fear of people who go
against what is considered 'normal' for their assigned genders, also known as
gender roles. Gender roles of men shown as strong, brave, and dangerous heroes
of masculinity and women characterized as submissive, caring, and gentle things
of femininity; these ideas of gender roles are forced subliminally onto us
leaving us with a sexist perception of what the standard man and woman is, what
society defines as 'normal'. However, imagine if the standard gender roles were
to be rewritten putting the gender roles of society on the opposite sex, changing
it so that
men were the ones persistently perused by women and if women were raised to not
show the weakness in their emotions. Even more drastic yet, picture a
world where gender roles were eliminated and had no foothold in people's minds;
we may naturally gravitate towards our old gender roles because it is coded into
our biology, or we might reshape gender roles into guidelines for all humans,
not like our separate roles for men and women twisted by the need to uphold
historic belief, the need to advertise for profit, and the greed to keep the
power where it is. What are the effects of the current gender role stereotypes
given to people, and is it possible to live in a society without them?
A woman goes to a high fashion retailer to
look at the latest fashions, she works for a important clothing magazine that
is always up-to-date with the trends so her style is always under surveillance.
She sees so many cute things that she cannot make up her mind, until she
decides to buy them all to fill up some of that empty space in her closet.
A man goes to a high fashion retailer to look at the latest
fashions, he works for a important clothing magazine that is always up-to-date
with the trends so his style is always under surveillance. He sees so many cute
things that he cannot make up his mind, until he decides to buy them all to
fill up some of that empty space in his closet.
Take some time to analyze what is different about these
two segments, really think about what each sentence means for the woman and for
the man. Do not look at them as you yourself would judge them, think about the
issue globally, from the position of someone likely to find issue with the
difference, someone who has become a bigot by blindly following the ideals of
gender roles. From that perspective, several actions would be marked as being
feminine qualities only women should do such as; working in the fashion
industry, being conscious of clothing style, describing clothes you want to
wear as 'cute', indecisiveness with decisions, compulsive buying, and even
having enough clothes to fill-up your closet. A woman can do all of these
things and not be questioned or rejected for any reason, but when a man does
them it is unnatural, making people hateful, fearful and for some it is
sickening.
There is a large displacement between societies' image of
the ideal man and the man in the segment above, he is so far from 'normal' that
he is feared because of his unique differences and is shunned from society. Society
believes that their ways of masculinity is the appropriate way for a boy to
act, what proof of this do they have to keep this belief in place? The rules
society expects boys to follow are damaging to the growth of a human, a drastic
example of the results of these rules and there outcomes is given by Joan
Morgan, author of "From Fly-Girls to Bitches and Hos", talking about
rappers and their artistic interpretation of the way they live their lives
given in their music and lyrics, she explains "When brothers talk so cavalierly
about killing each other and then reveal that they have no expectation to see
their twenty-first birthday, this is straight-up depression masquerading as machismo,"(603).
Morgan is talking about black men inparticular, but these men are living their interpretations
of what they think of as the manly lifestyle that is acceptable for a black man
in our society. You would be shocked if a woman was to have this attitude
towards life, but it is within the realm of possibility for a man to have this
attitude because it falls in line with the attitude expected by society from
men. Why should that depression be considered natural for a man, when a man
shopping for cute clothes is considered unnatural?
A man sprints down the street
from his house so his family cannot see him cry, he goes down a dark alley and
finds an abandoned 67' Chrysler. He starts to beat the car with whatever he can
find, not even noticing the deep cuts forming on his hands.
A woman sprints down the street
from her house so her family cannot see her cry, she goes down a dark alley and
finds an abandoned 67' Chrysler. She starts to beat the car with whatever she
can find, not even taking noticing of the deep cuts forming on her hands.
A bigot whom looks at this with strict belief in societies
gender roles would take notice that the woman is; physically exerting herself,
running away from her emotions, is not scared of danger, knows something about
cars, she releases her anger in physical form, and is unphased by the pain in
her hands. Qualities that are typical in a boy and not quite so typical in
girls, this difference from normality leads to society, the mass populous, into
feeling unrelated and distant from the single person justifying the person's
exile from society. These characteristics are scary coming from a boy, but from
a girl it seems even more drastic and unpredictable. She is a girl, most would
perceive on site that she is happy, safe, and unthreatening, but when she acts
out in anger in such ways she is looked at more critically then the boy because
it is expected from the boy, not the girl.
Women have made leaps and strides in equality, fighting
uphill against the gender roles that are placed on them as women. This has
given women a much stronger sense of pride in recent years, allowing them to
have the courage to break several of the barriers that were used to keep woman
in check back in the day. Michael Kimmel gives an example when he writes, '
"Whenever I ask a women what they think it means to be a woman, they look
at me puzzled, and say, basically 'Whatever I want'"(608). Here's another
angle to look at it from, what would you call a girl who typically does boy
activities? A 'tomboy' is likely the first thing to pop into your head, nothing
wrong in calling a girl that some girls even call themselves that proudly.
Now, what do you
call a boy that like to take part in feminine activities? It is difficult to
come up with a term similar to a 'tomboy' for a boy, many of the terms that you
would first think to use are derogatory like 'fag' or 'sissy'. The author of "Boyhood Femininity, Gender Identity Disorder, Masculine Presuppositions, and the
Anxiety of Regulation", Ken Corbett, elaborates the situation "
Feminine boys are often described as 'whiny', 'mincing', 'weak', 'just like a
girl'. These modes of address not
only signal the demeaned status of feminine boys, but also illustrates how
anguish as a bid toward social redress is shunned. And how emotion as a call to
social transformation is belittled,"(Corbett). Why is there a non- derogative
name for girls going against gender roles, but not a single commonly used non-derogative
name for boys going against their gender roles? Because women have years of
feminism striving for women to have the right to be seen as equals to a man.
This is not the
same for men, man has not made strides for equality with women because most men
are content with the position they hold and have no desire to be like a woman.
Leaving them to face the brutal standards such as "big boys don't
cry" and "take it like a man" which are messages forced onto men
at a very young age. Leaving boys to be very critical of the way they act, as
well as other boys actions, and self-conscious of the way they are perceived by
other men. They are unable to do several things that a woman can do because of
the way they are raised to think that doing anything feminine is not allowed
for a boy.
I grew up with four
brothers, we had seven boys total in the house counting my step-father and
grandfather leaving my mom as the only woman in the house. With so many boys in
the house everything was often a masculinity contest, I rarely won. My mom
always kept a diary for all the funny things us boys said and did as children,
one story in the book i heard several times was, "I went to all of my boys
to ask them what they wanted to do as a career when they got older. Broc said that
he wanted to be a race car driver like his daddy, Dylan said he wanted to be a veterinarian
cause he likes animals, Ty said he wanted to be a professional baseball player.
Last, I went to Tyler and asked him what he wanted to be when he grew up, he
said "Either a singer, a dancer, or a
hairstylist".....Uh-oh...." This was from my mother, I reheard this
story in her version about a year after it happened. When I heard the punch line
as "Uh-Oh" all I wanted to do was rip the page from the journal and
pretend that it never happened. I was scared to be called out like that by the naivety
of a joke my mom put in her funny stories journal, a story that was shared with
our entire family, all thirty-six of them. Why was I so scared? I saw it as
outing myself as gay, a story from when I was young and just innocently answering
a question. They laughed at the story, like it was just a good joke, it had no
real meaning. At most they saw it as a phase and just laughed it off, but in
their ignorance of the situation I was left to form my own opinions from their
reactions, that being a singer/dancer/hairstylist was not an appropriate thing
for a boy to do, that may be exactly what they thought and why they were
laughing at the story. This was a defining moment for my masculinity, I see
this as the moment I was trapped in by gender roles for the next ten years of
my life.
The purpose of the gender roles in unclear, it has been
for several years a way to keep people in check, particularly women and
homosexuals. It has also been fundamentals that we raise our children on,
giving them rules they will come to see as the way people in the world function
making the ones that do not follow these rules to be either ostracized or forced
into a rut of self-denial in order to fit in with everyone else. Gender roles
have been attractive qualities that bring people together in love, as well as,
the defining factor of irregularities to be feared and avoided. These roles do
slightly adapt to the times as can be seen through-out the years, but I think system
does not have a problem of adapting to the situation we have, but is in need a
complete restructuring of the gender role system for situations that are to
come today and in the future. We need to reevaluate what is true within these
gender roles and what is opinion.
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