Saturday, February 27, 2010

Blog 3

Prompt 1b “Dude, you’re a Fag” C.J. Pascoe; Chapter 1
“Similarly contemporary meanings of sexuality, particularly heterosexuality, for instance, eroticize male dominance and female submission.” In chapter one, Pascoe opens with a scene from a high school skit that seems to portray aspects of “masculinity.” In this chapter he talks about how masculinity can be portrayed to society, and how it often is seen. I know these things to be true, and the way Pascoe described the scene made sense to me.
Pascoe stated that “the boys shed their last remnants of femininity by ripping off their matching miniskirts” (p. 3). This was something I could immediately relate too. I have heard so many ignorant statements told about the ideas of masculinity and femininity. Suddenly the boys are suddenly men and no longer weak and feminine because they ripped off their miniskirts. This brings me to the ignorant idea I have heard so many people say. People seem to have the idea that if someone is gay they are less masculine and want to wear girl’s clothes! Just because someone is gay doesn’t mean they are a girl or want to act/dress like one! The quote stated above made me think of this idea and relate it to ignorant statements I hear daily. It is relatable, even our professor said his Dad thought he was going to run around in a dress and high heels when he found out he was gay. Our society has a skewed image of masculinity that men have to live up too, and this is sometimes/most of the time mixed in with being gay. Our society becomes homophobic, and suddenly if you are not built, a player, and totally masculine in every way you are gay and might as well be a girl. It is sad, but just makes me laugh that people could honestly think this, but at the same time it is not hard to believe with all the pressures of masculinity our society puts on men.


Prompt 1a “Dude you’re a Fag” C.J. Pascoe; Chapter 2
This chapter presented a new yet old idea to me. I know gender had been engraved in our heads, but every reading I am shocked to see how the author’s present new institutes that help engrave gender roles and identities into our heads. Pascoe talks about the school as a main institute that supports heterosexual and typical gender roles. I have never really noticed this before. Maybe I haven’t noticed it because I am a heterosexual female, so it doesn’t really affect me in that way. However, it does affect me because I am for equality and have many friends with different sexual orientations, so it makes me sad I am blind and so normalized to some of these gender roles. We are so normalized to this heterosexual outlook on life and within school programs, etc that I wouldn’t even know how they could start over and make it equal. It would cause an uproar that’s for sure. Although this is a new yet old idea to me, it is also confusing, because I do not know how one would change these roles and maybe match up boys with boy escorts at events, etc without someone freaking out about it. It is definitely something that needs to be addressed in society, because not everyone is heterosexual, but it is hard to change something that we have all been exposed to and taught since birth.


Prompt 1b “Dude you’re a Fag” C.J. Pascoe; Chapter 3
Chapter three was a chapter that can be seen in everyday life and that makes total sense to me. Pascoe talks about our homophobic society. He mentions how “fag” is the worst thing to call a man, how many men are homophobic, and how it is okay to be lesbian in guy’s eyes, but being gay is disgusting to them. I know so many guys who are homophobic! It is crazy. Or they think every gay guy is going to try to hit on them. My main response to that ignorant thought has become “what makes you think you are his type or that he would be into you?” It’s a great one to throw at them! But seriously, why is it so wrong to be gay or portrayed as a fag?? And now the term fag is used just as a letdown, both genders use this word to bring someone down although they may not believe the person is really a fag. I just don’t understand and I can’t stand how some people are so homophobic and stereotypical. This is something that also puts pressure on men. They have to be completely masculine or they are a “fag,” and the men who are gay (who are still men if they are gay!) are looked down upon by most other men and considered less masculine. But it is alright to be a lesbian, because men think it is hot (only if the two girls are “hot”). What a double standard. This was definitely a relatable chapter and our society really needs a wakeup call and has no reason to be homophobic.


Prompt 1b “The Will to Change” Bell Hooks; Chapter 3
Bell Hooks talks about a topic I have seen much of before. She explains how young boys are the only ones who are able to show their true emotions and their love. I have a little brother, and babysit often, and have male friends. So I am able to see this change a lot. I notice this difference in the different age groups of boys. Younger boys I sit for easily share their emotions: cry, yell, love, etc. The older they get the more “masculine” and out of touch with their emotions they get. The will often get upset with their sister or younger siblings and say things like “why are you crying over that? Stop being such a girl.” This doesn’t mean they have no emotions but our society and idea of patriarchy makes boys feel like they have to be emotionless and not show their desire or want for love. They need to be strong, and emotions make them weak. This idea is ridiculous to me, but is something I know affects our society because it is something I see every day and can relate to.


Prompt 1b “Dude you’re a Fag” C.J. Pascoe; Chapter 4
In this chapter, Pascoe talks about “compulsive heterosexuality.” This was another topic that was very relatable to me. Pascoe tells how young men constantly think and talk about sex in a group of other guys. This was kind of a new idea for me. I knew men talked about sex a lot, but Pascoe related it to showing heterosexuality and being “dominant.” I had recently just talked about the topic of dominance, and it scares me that men look at sex in that aspect. The reason it scares me is because it was recently brought to my attention when talking about rape. Someone stated that rape “isn’t about sex, its about dominance and power.” If our society is bringing men to see power and dominance as such a big part of masculinity and that is getting translated into sex, this is a very bad thing in my eyes. Especially when it leads to rape in some cases. It is so important for men to show their heterosexuality in our society, and by getting with lots of women; this is a way of showing their heterosexuality. However it is also a topic I have seen many times before, men seem to always talk about sex and getting girls. When they do they are praised by other guys, but if a girl “sleeps around” she is looked at as a hoe.


Prompt 2b “Dude you’re a Fag” C.J. Pascoe; Chapter 4
When Pascoe talks about men being different around a group of guys and around their girlfriends and how they changed, I immediately thought of many guy friends I have. Sometimes I have hung out with all my guy friends and I’ll be the only girl, and they will constantly talk about girls and sex, but when the group is mixed up, their personality changes, and when it is one on one, they are a totally different person. Or when with a guy one on one and they run into a buddy everything about them changes in an instant. Most guys I know put on a whole new face to impress their guy friends I guess. Honestly this makes me sad. Because I feel I may know who they truly are, but for some reason they are not allowed to share that with the rest of the world. I know some of my friends are not who they portray themselves to be, so it sucks that they have the pressure to be this “masculine” man who has sex and is dominant to women. It sucks that they feel they have to follow this pressure and be a person they are not.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Blog Number 2!

Prompt (1a)
Allan G Johnson – “Patriarchy, The System”
This article presented a new idea to me that I totally agree with. Our society is so fast to point the finger at others. If something goes wrong or someone is racist, violent, sexist, we say they have a messed up mind and are somewhat disgusted. But we never ask how they got that way. We never think to look at our society, and how many things in our society could shape people in a bad way. The article states that if a man beat, raped, harassed, etc a woman we ask how could they instead of asking “what kind of society could promote persistent patterns of such behavior in everyday life, from wife-beating jokes to the routine inclusion of sexual coercion and violence in mainstream movies” (p. 344).
This presented a new idea to me. Of course I am not blind to all the violence and sex in today’s media. I knew it must be detrimental in some way; however I never really took it as seriously as I should have. I always blame the individual when in fact our society is filling people’s heads with horrible ideas. And though I do not necessarily support it, I am still a supporter by seeing such films, in a sense fueling profit and agree to the violence being portrayed. It was a new idea to take more responsibility. A lot of the times we all think we are innocent, but in reality there is so much more we could do. “As the saying goes, what evil requires is simply that ordinary people do nothing” (p. 345).

Prompt (1b)
Pail Kivel – “The act like a man box”
This is an article that I could totally relate too and something that I see every day. I learned a little background from wmst 101, which led me to take this class. Men are just as pressured and oppressed in a sense as women. They have more benefits in certain areas, but in all honestly they are silently beaten and forced to hold back all emotions that every human possesses.
This cycle is unfair to both men and women. It is not fair for men to have to hide their emotions and be “manly” at all times. However, this also is unfair to women. Because it seems the worst thing you can call a man is a “fag” or something that relates to a woman. “This feeds into two things we are taught to fear: (1) that we may not be manly enough and (2) that we might be gay” (p. 148). I feel so bad for men to have to be pressured into this box, and it just disturbs me that the biggest fears relate to having to be like a woman (I don’t know why that is so bad?!) or being gay! Homophobia is such a big concept to men and I feel that so many men are homophobic and it is so annoying. And our culture and this box are making men fear this and not being manly enough!


Prompt (1c)
Bell Hooks – “The will to Change” Chapter 1
I was somewhat confused of what Hooks was saying. Not that it was hard to understand or that she didn’t know what she was talking about, but rather because I couldn’t relate. She talks about men’s love. How she longed for love from her Father more than her Mother and she said many girls and boys feel that way. This was unrelatable to me, because I never longer for my father’s love more. Maybe I was just fortunate and he showed me his love. I could also not relate to not wanted to hear men’s feelings. I personally love deep conversations and love it when men open up and you truly get to know a person. That idea does not freak me out at all. She also stated that “real men get mad” (p. 7). This is also something that I couldn’t relate too. Of course I know men seem to get angrier easier and they are taught to express this emotion alone. But I do not agree with it. Half the time when I see a guy get mad it is for a dumb reason in my opinion and I see him as needing anger management and it is a turn off to me not something or the only thing that I want to see men express.
However I had mixed feelings on this chapter, because some of what she said was relatable. I do believe women value relationships with men. Even for me when I have a close guy friend, to have a deep conversation with them or when they tell you how they really feel, it means so much more to me than if a girlfriend were to say the same thing. It means more because it is more unexpected and women tell you daily how they feel. So in a way I feel bad for men. They are getting mixed signals and Hooks explains. We want their love and for them to show emotion (which I really do want) but at the same time we want to feel safe, protected, and we want them to be the fearless provider. “Ultimately boys and men save themselves when they earn the art of loving” (p. 16). We must let men be free to love and express themselves and not always expect them to be fearless, for we all have emotions.


Prompt (1a)
The second chapter of “The Will to Change” by Hooks presented a new idea to me. I have always known that men have been looked at as the “provider” but some of the concepts that Hooks talked about presented some new ideas to me. Our society seems to see mainly only the troubles that women face, so there comes the feminist. Feminism is something I agree with and I consider myself a feminist, but looking more into men and the idea of masculinities I feel that our society doesn’t fully recognize the pressures they put on men to be “inherently dominating, superior to everything and everyone deemed weak, especially females, and endowed with the right to dominate and rule over the weak and to maintain that dominance through various forms of psychological terrorism and violence” (p.18).
Our society put these ideas and pressures into men. They were not born violent with ideas of dominance. When you notice this, I notice at least that our society is really detrimental to men. They have to pressure to be superior, a provider, not show their emotions, etc. If I had to hide my emotions then I would feel like I was hiding part of me. Also when Hooks mentioned the idea of church that was something new to me. I have been to church and never even realized how the church group put the pressures on men too. The Bible states men are there to rule and women are caregivers, also Jesus is portrayed as a man. I am really glad to start noticing these things so I can do what I can to reduce the pressures of the men in my life.



Prompt (2b)
When I read the article “The act like a man box” by Paul Kivel, I immediately wanted to write about it and thought of an incident that just happened to me a few days ago.
The article talks about how boys are told to be manly and not a sissy and “most of all they are told not to cry” (p. 148). Just a few days ago I was talking to one of my best guy friends. His Grandfather was really sick and getting ready to pass away, as the doctors said. So of course we talked about it a lot. We were texting and he shocked me because he said “sorry if I am acting like a baby about this.” I was immediately shocked and wondered why he would even feel the need to day that. I informed him that he is not a baby at all and it was a huge deal. Anyone would be sad and consumed by the thought. Also we are really close so I just didn’t even know why he would think that. I thought about our class and when I read this article, I thought about our conversation.
It makes me so sad to think that this “box” has the effect that is described in this article. I have always seen this idea of boys having to be manly but until the incident with my friend I didn’t realize how much it affects guys. My friend who was going through a really tough time shouldn’t feel the need to justify anything to me. I never thought of him as a wimp, but he obviously has been affected by this idea of not being able to cry and being manly. It makes me sad to think guys are programmed in this way, and it affects them in ways more than we may think or know.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Blog 1

Prompt 1(a)
Based on the reading “Gendered Bodies: Feminist Perspective” by Lorber and Moore, a new and upsetting idea was presented to me.
I have always been a supporter of equality and same-sex relationships/marriages, etc. To me everyone should be able to make their own decisions. However this article talked about how our genders that are stated right at birth do not allow us to be as diverse as we could be.
I have always noticed that gender is a huge role in our society and seems of such importance in our society. But I never really noticed the harmful effects of this classification. To me it helped with determining health issues, etc. But after reading this article and specifically this quote “Human bodies are not ‘natural’; they are socially produces under specific cultural circumstances. They are shaped by sociocultural ideals of what female and male bodies should look like and be capable of” (p. 2).
This idea was new to me. It was new to look at gender specifications in this way. Before I didn’t really see the harm in it, but this quote and article made me realize how shaped we are based on our gender. And I know that for some people picking a gender is not the easiest thing. For a job or doctor visit sure they may put what they were classified at birth, but what about how they feel, or which gender they were or want to be? It is a confusing and to me personally an unnecessary thing to focus so much of our time on. Our society shouldn’t classify everyone by gender.


Prompt 1(b)
The article titled “how do you Know?” by Green really made sense to me. The whole idea of femininity and masculinity being portrayed by women and men is something that irritates me so muc.h. Technically I would be classified as a heterosexual female. However I do not choose to take on many feminine roles. I do not like to act “like a lady” all the time. I do not want to put on my make up and do my hair everyday either. And because of this I shouldn’t have people judging me and saying I do not act like a lady or that I am not the ideal image of a woman.
There was one quote I could really relate too. The quote that hit me was “Or you might see a male person with feminine characteristics and assume he is gay, but he may very well be straight or bisexual. And he might think of himself as masculine, no matter what you might conclude from observing him” (p. 5). I know many people who identify as straight or see themselves as masculine, that are often classified by others as gay. Just because they may like something a little more “girly” or they are more sensitive people make their assumptions. It just makes me think of the saying you know what happens when you assume, it makes an ass out of you and me. Assuming does no one any good. And assuming something about someone you don’t even know makes no sense to me. Why does it even matter what gender or sex someone is? It makes me sad to realize that this idea is so important to our society and that we automatically judge people based on what we observe for a short period of time. People should be able to act how they want and not have people assuming who they are.


Prompt 1(a)
This article by Lorber “Night to his Day” related to the first one to me. It had the same message to me but something else popped out in this article to me.
Again this idea of gender being imprinted in our brains is a new concept for me. I can see that it is there, but it is something I never noticed or considered before. From birth we are classified, and like the first article by Lorber, we are shaped with this idea of gender. At such a young age we are put into a category and taught the “right way” to act based on that category.
This idea shocks me when you really think about it; because you will not truly feel free to explore or do what you think is fun if you are taught that may be the “wrong” way. The story in this article that really made me think was the story of the baby dressed in all white. Baseball cap and all white, so maybe a boy. But no it was a girl and it was made known because of the earrings and flowered shoes. The article goes onto tell that if we do not know the gender of a baby we get uncomfortable. The first question we ask is if it’s a boy or a girl. This has always seemed harmless to me, but after reading the article it seems so sad that we are all programmed that way. Why should we get uncomfortable if we don’t know the gender? Why is gender classification so important and our first question? When I truly looked at this idea, it really does get into the brains of the youth and restricts them from who they truly may be.


Prompt (1c)
The article titled, “A continuous Nonverbal Communication” by Riki Wilchins, was an article I found confusing. I just found the writing of the article confusing. I understood to some aspect what the author was proposing, but didn’t see the importance as he did.
Now don’t get me wrong, I am a supporter or equality, gender rights, etc, but I have never thought of fighting for gender civil rights or for taking this to a political standpoint. I see it as an important aspect that deserves a fight, but I do not think that political action will necessarily fix much. I would love to see more acceptance and understanding, but I know that just because something is politically recognized doesn’t mean people will agree with it.
Unfortunately some people are still racist; just as they are sexist. After reading the article I see now the importance of bringing this to a bigger fight and a political standpoint, but at first I was just confused. It would be great to see this fight being fought and won and accepted, but even if it is politically recognized doesn’t mean it is accepted by most. I guess I just see the importance in people truly changing and being open minded and accepted, I never looked at it in a civil rights movement kind of way, but now I do see the importance in it.




Prompt 2 (b)
The article that really stuck with me was “Gendered Bodies: Feminist Perspective” by Lorber and Moore. Like I stated earlier, gender is obviously everywhere in our society, but I had never looked at in a detrimental way until reading these articles.
These gender ideals make it hard for people to fully express and be themselves. But the reason I chose to expand on this article, was the quote that stated: “Similarly, because homosexuals are so devalued, gay men and women in the public eye may choose to look ‘straight’ in their appearance, even when they are open about their sexuality” (p. 1). This quote just automatically made me mad and sad. But it was relatable. I have many friends who are gay, and most of them put on the “straight” look and attitude around certain people. But to me they are so open and they truly know who they are inside. I was even more shocked to learn that our professor who I know is so open, puts on the “straight” look at the bars. It makes me so sad to hear this. I know all these people know who they are and are open for the most part, but they still hide certain aspects of their life because of the way our society has classified “normal and gender.”
I think people are not truly themselves at times because of all the pressure. Since birth we are told that there are men and women. Men do this and women do that. And if you do not act the way you are supposed to based on your gender then you are looked down upon. And although my friends and our professor are totally comfortable with their sexuality, they are still in some aspects not being true to themselves. And this may be for the benefit of others. The idea of being gay still scares some people. And I could see how those who still put on the “straight” mask may be doing that because it may not even be worth it to explain to people, or put up with their discomfort. That is the problem. People are so programmed to seeing gender and the “right way” it should be modeled that they are blind to who people really are.
So this article and the idea of gender really hit home for me. I have many friends who have to deal with this daily, and I just think it is so wrong.