I agree, although some of the problem as I see it, is that what has traditionally defined men's roles (and thus their identity as 'masculine') has been taken up by women.Green Habit wrote:That was a very difficult long read to get through, just because I think the very concept of prescribed sex roles is one that needs to be thrown into the garbage can of history. Suffice to say, I didn't agree with her at all.
I think you're right about this part. While women have done a decent job of taking on traditionally male tasks (when they can), men haven't come nearly as far taking on traditionally female tasks.malice wrote:I think men are more affected by these changes because the push for equality has been focused on women's rights without much consideration for how this impacts men in the society. as a result, men are now being forced to redefine their own identities as men, and this results in a huge upheaval in how we handle relationships of all kinds.
women provide for their families, women participate in the military... I'm unsure if women fight in combat in the US- I don't think they do though- in other countries (I'm thinking of Israel, for one) women do fight in combat... women become politically powerful (again, not to the degree men do but the opportunity now exists when it never did in earlier iterations of this country) - and I'm sure there's numerous activities that were always considered totally male that women now at least have some option to participate in that didn't exist before - all of these things have psychological ramifications that I don't think we've thought much about over the last 40 years or so (as feminism has come to the fore).
I've now read a number of articles about this phenomenon - that while women have developed a fairly strong support system for empowerment as a result of the women's movement and provide direction for young women to follow, men have been left somewhat floundering in the aftermath.
it's pretty easy to assume men aren't terribly affected by the changes in women's roles, because (I believe) we still attribute many negatives to how men think and feel and experience life differently than women - but some of that is social conditioning and stereotyping.
I think there has to be some admissions on both sides of the gender fence that men and women are not all that different in how we react to the world around us, men are just as likely to suffer feelings of inadequacy and insecurity about their place in the world, and there needs to be as complex and as well developed a support system for men as has developed for women over the years.
the main problem that I see is there still exists a a lot of us and them comparisons - I'd be much happier if we stopped defining ourselves in this way.
there are differences in how we behave, and perhaps also in how we think about life, but I wonder often now about how much of that is because that's how the society has dictated we see each other.
someone here told me awhile back that they didn't think there was that much of a difference between how men and women thought. I disagreed at the time... but I've thought about it a lot over the last few months and ultimately, they're probably right.
we're first 'people' - brains inside of a skull.
next we're men or women.
the stronger identity comes from the brain, not the gender at birth.
tl;dr version: people are people, how we perceive one another is up to us?