masculinity$47043$ - definizione. Che cos'è masculinity$47043$
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Cosa (chi) è masculinity$47043$ - definizione

CONCEPT IN GENDER STUDIES
Male hegemony; Hegemonic Masculinity; Hybrid Masculinity; Hybrid masculinity; Gender hierarchy
  • The cyclical pattern of how hegemonic masculinity is produced, reproduced, and perpetuated

Psychology of Men & Masculinities         
JOURNAL
Psychology of Men and Masculinity (journal); Wikipedia talk:Articles for creation/Psychology of Men and Masculinity (journal); Psychology of Men & Masculinity; Psychol Men Masculinity; Psychol. Men Masculinity; Psychology of Men & Masculinity (journal); Psychology of Men and Masculinity; Psychol Men Masculinities; Psychol. Men Masculinities; Psychology of Men and Masculinities
Psychology of Men & Masculinities (originally Psychology of Men & Masculinity) is a peer-reviewed academic journal published by the American Psychological Association on behalf of Division 51. The journal was established in 2000 and covers research on "how boys' and men's psychology is influenced and shaped by both gender and sex, and encompasses the study of the social construction of gender, sex differences and similarities, and biological processes.
masculine         
  • date=July 2020}}
  • from Afghanistan]]. Fighting in [[war]]s and [[drinking alcohol]] are both traditionally masculine activities in many cultures.
  • Beowulf]] fighting the dragon
  • Vaudeville trapeze artist and strongwoman, [[Charmion]]
  • url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofwo0000unse_g9b9/page/835}}</ref>
  • [[Lewis Hine]]'s photo of a power house mechanic working on a steam pump
  • [[Odysseus]], hero of the ''Odyssey''
  • color photograph]] of a construction worker
ATTRIBUTES ASSOCIATED WITH BOYS AND MEN
Maculinity; Masculinities; Man's man; Masculine men; Masculine; Manliness; Manliest; Female masculinity; Precarious manhood; Crisis of masculinity; Female athlete paradox
¦ adjective
1. having qualities or appearance traditionally associated with men.
male.
2. Grammar of or denoting a gender of nouns and adjectives conventionally regarded as male.
¦ noun (the masculine) the male sex or gender.
Derivatives
masculinely adverb
masculinist adjective or noun
masculinity noun
Origin
ME: via OFr. from L. masculinus, from masculus 'male'.
Masculine         
  • date=July 2020}}
  • from Afghanistan]]. Fighting in [[war]]s and [[drinking alcohol]] are both traditionally masculine activities in many cultures.
  • Beowulf]] fighting the dragon
  • Vaudeville trapeze artist and strongwoman, [[Charmion]]
  • url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofwo0000unse_g9b9/page/835}}</ref>
  • [[Lewis Hine]]'s photo of a power house mechanic working on a steam pump
  • [[Odysseus]], hero of the ''Odyssey''
  • color photograph]] of a construction worker
ATTRIBUTES ASSOCIATED WITH BOYS AND MEN
Maculinity; Masculinities; Man's man; Masculine men; Masculine; Manliness; Manliest; Female masculinity; Precarious manhood; Crisis of masculinity; Female athlete paradox
·adj Of the male sex; not female.
II. Masculine ·adj Belonging to males; appropriated to, or used by, males.
III. Masculine ·adj Having the qualities of a man; suitable to, or characteristic of, a man; virile; not feminine or effeminate; strong; robust.
IV. Masculine ·adj Having the inflections of, or construed with, words pertaining especially to male beings, as distinguished from feminine and neuter. ·see Gender.

Wikipedia

Hegemonic masculinity

In gender studies, hegemonic masculinity is part of R. W. Connell's gender order theory, which recognizes multiple masculinities that vary across time, society, culture, and the individual. Hegemonic masculinity is defined as a practice that legitimizes men's dominant position in society and justifies the subordination of the common male population and women, and other marginalized ways of being a man. Conceptually, hegemonic masculinity proposes to explain how and why men maintain dominant social roles over women, and other gender identities, which are perceived as "feminine" in a given society.

As a sociological concept, the nature of hegemonic masculinity derives from the theory of cultural hegemony, by Marxist theorist Antonio Gramsci, which analyses the power relations among the social classes of a society. Hence, in the term hegemonic masculinity, the adjective hegemonic refers to the cultural dynamics by means of which a social group claims, and sustains, a leading and dominant position in a social hierarchy; nonetheless, hegemonic masculinity embodies a form of social organization that has been sociologically challenged and changed.

The conceptual beginnings of hegemonic masculinity represented the culturally idealized form of manhood that was socially and hierarchically exclusive and concerned with bread-winning; that was anxiety-provoking and differentiated (internally and hierarchically); that was brutal and violent, pseudo-natural and tough, psychologically contradictory, and thus crisis-prone; economically rich and socially sustained. However, many sociologists criticized that definition of hegemonic masculinity as a fixed character-type, which is analytically limited, because it excludes the complexity of different, and competing, forms of masculinity. Consequently, hegemonic masculinity was reformulated to include gender hierarchy, the geography of masculine configurations, the processes of social embodiment, and the psycho-social dynamics of the varieties of masculinity.

Proponents of the concept of hegemonic masculinity argue that it is conceptually useful for understanding gender relations, and is applicable to life-span development, education, criminology, the representations of masculinity in the mass communications media, the health of men and women, and the functional structure of organizations. Critics argue that hegemonic masculinity is heteronormative, is not self-reproducing, ignores positive aspects of masculinity, relies on a flawed underlying concept of masculinity, or is too ambiguous to have practical application.