-
36 votes
-
A trans priest wants to help men through the masculinity crisis
9 votes -
The sad, stupid rise of the sigma male: how toxic masculinity took over social media
23 votes -
The food that makes you gay
27 votes -
Join me on the path to Twilightenment
27 votes -
What's the matter with men? They’re floundering at school and in the workplace. Some conservatives blame a crisis of masculinity, but the problems—and their solutions—are far more complex.
51 votes -
Why are there such profound differences in conceptions of masculinity between Denmark and America?
15 votes -
Rock Hudson: How a gay truck driver became the biggest star in Hollywood
8 votes -
No Fap: A cultural history of anti-masturbation
34 votes -
A handful of influencers are trying to turn the tide on toxic masculinity. But can they get anyone to listen?
36 votes -
Ken is a bell hooks critique come to life in ‘Barbie’
31 votes -
Men are lost. Here’s a map out of the wilderness.
93 votes -
The best way to find out if someone is a Donald Trump voter? Ask them what they think about manhood.
29 votes -
Positive masculinity is overrated
15 votes -
Movie recommendation: Falling Down (1993)
Falling Down Runtime: 1h 53m Budget: $25m Tomatometer: 75% 6.8/10 (Audience 88% 4/5) IMDB Rating: 7.6 / 10 - 188k ratings (Top 1000 7.5/10) Language: English Streaming: Vudu , Amazon Michael...
Falling Down
Runtime: 1h 53m
Budget: $25m
Tomatometer: 75% 6.8/10 (Audience 88% 4/5)
IMDB Rating: 7.6 / 10 - 188k ratings (Top 1000 7.5/10)
Language: English
Michael Douglas plays Foster, a man with 1950's era mentality who is having a really bad day. He just wants to make it across LA in time for his daughters birthday. The increasing setbacks he faces from modern 1990's society see him increasingly break down into a string of violence episodes. But his violence is guided by his 1950's era set of morals. And in spite of Fosters nerdy 50's appearance, he is surprisingly good at the modern violence thing. Does the movie glorify the violent anti-hero? Not so fast.
Robert Duvell plays Prendergast. A retiring cop on desk duty who is the only who connects the violent dots together. But because he is a retiring desk jockey who is clearly too afraid to take on a real cops job, almost no one listens to him. Almost no one. There is one person on the force who knows Prendergast has a lot more going on than people realize.
This story is an interesting analysis of the male psyche under pressure. Foster reacts with anger and aggression. Predergast bends to the point of being a doormat, and he just lies there and takes it.
What the movie uncovers at the end, is there is a middle ground, that handling life's setbacks sometimes requires patience and grace, and sometimes requires assertiveness and boldness, and that wisdom is knowing what you can and should try to change and what you can and should try to accept.
This movie has always been a favorite of mine, because I love a little bit of the old ultra violence, and I love an unusual ending that makes you rethink about the entire movie with a new perspective.
But what is really interesting, is this movie touches on the 1950's era males ideals and expectations men are still raised with today, and the outrage that arises when that sense of entitlement goes unfulfilled.
13 votes -
Should eighteen-year-olds be able to buy semiautomatic rifles? In Georgia, two young men who want to be the ‘good guys with guns’ try to decide.
9 votes -
The lacking foundations of male friendships
17 votes -
The reinvention of a ‘real man’: In cowboy country, a father and husband troubled by suicide reimagines American masculinity, one conversation at a time
7 votes -
Reject modernity, embrace masculinity: When toxicity is masked as positivity (AKA praising bodybuilders shouldn't be coupled with transphobia)
7 votes -
Abuse and toxic masculinity: The complex themes of Guardians of the Galaxy vol. 2
5 votes -
How do you distinguish between masculinity and toxic masculinity?
This has been a thread I’ve wanted to make for a while but I’ve hesitated to for fear of it going badly. Recent events, however, have made me think it’s a topic that’s we can’t really afford to...
This has been a thread I’ve wanted to make for a while but I’ve hesitated to for fear of it going badly. Recent events, however, have made me think it’s a topic that’s we can’t really afford to ignore.
When people read the phrase “toxic masculinity”, some see a clear collection of bad behaviors or mindsets that exist independent of men as a whole, while some see an indictment of an entire gender or identity. I’ve talked to men who have admitted to not knowing how to be masculine without being “toxic”because they can’t see a clear line where one ends and the other begins.
Thus, I’m interested in exploring what specifically gets defined as “toxic masculinity” and how we distinguish it from neutral or positive masculinity.
Part of what has kept me from asking this is that I see in people here two different experiences that I fear might collide in bad ways. I know we have people here (myself included) who have been directly harmed by behaviors and mindsets that would fall under the umbrella of “toxic masculinity”. Likewise, I know we have people here who have been harmed by an over-application of the phrase — being seen or treated as “toxic” simply for being men and thus being denied the dignity of their own identity. Giving credence to one experience can feel like it overrides the other.
Even just the phrase itself is the kind of thing that often divides people into camps and causes conflict, and I’m hoping we can avoid that here. (Though, to be honest, Tildes always impresses me with how we handle difficult topics, so I’m not sure where my worry is coming from). My goal for this topic is for everyone to have the opportunity to speak openly to convey understood truths and lived experiences in ways that maintain dignity for everyone involved.
The guiding question is about distinguishing masculinity from toxic masculinity, but answers don’t have to be limited to that. I’m interested in hearing about people’s relationship with masculinity in general, both in people who identify with it and those who don’t.
29 votes -
The male millennial vernacular of getting swole
14 votes -
King of the Hill, again | Men of the Hill
12 votes -
Masculinity attitudes across rural, suburban, and urban areas in the United States
8 votes -
At least forty-four Fort Bragg soldiers died stateside in 2020 — several of them were homicides. Families want answers. But the Army isn’t giving any
13 votes -
Considering the silence of teenage boys in the wake of my son's traumatic injury
13 votes -
The domestic masculinity of Helltaker
10 votes -
CO-VIDs: The semiotics of "cuck"
12 votes -
Private dinners where men discuss feelings and equality have taken off in Sweden – but the concept isn't without controversy
7 votes -
Becoming a man
15 votes -
Army warns soldiers about 'incel' threat at Joker movie: Report (It's based on a tip from the FBI)
7 votes -
Why men love war (1984)
8 votes -
The magical thinking of guys who love logic
43 votes -
Men
41 votes -
The case against summer camp
6 votes -
A short history of manly beauty products for masculine men
15 votes -
Men have no friends and women bear the burden
27 votes -
Where's masculinity headed? Men's groups and therapists are talking.
14 votes -
'Our goal is to halve the male suicide rate’: why no-frills therapy works for men
19 votes -
Obama on masculinity: 'You don't need eight women around you twerking'
17 votes -
How do you define your masculinity/femininity?
In lieu of the recent Gillette ad, and seeing as the conversation around it has stirred the pot quite a bit, I wanted to propose a conversation where we start from the very beginning: Without yet...
In lieu of the recent Gillette ad, and seeing as the conversation around it has stirred the pot quite a bit, I wanted to propose a conversation where we start from the very beginning:
Without yet talking about subsets, variants, or interpretations of masculinity/femininity (toxic or otherwise). How do you define it for yourself: what makes you masculine or feminine, or what parts of you would you describe as such, do you feel that those things go as universal descriptors or are they specific to your case?
There may also be some deeper questions in here about where you think you gained this conception (your family? your immediate circle of contacts? Role models?) or who you think best embodies your ideal definition of your gender.
23 votes -
A new "short film" by razor company Gillette has called for men to be the best they can be, sparking a significant backlash
42 votes -
In China, a school trains boys to be ‘real men’
12 votes -
Flowerboys and the appeal of 'soft masculinity' in South Korea
24 votes -
Thoughts on male relationships
Right now, the number one post on my personal Reddit feed is this: https://www.reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/9bryj8/straight_guys_of_reddit_whats_the_most_intimate/ Reading through this made me...
Right now, the number one post on my personal Reddit feed is this: https://www.reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/9bryj8/straight_guys_of_reddit_whats_the_most_intimate/
Reading through this made me feel quite a few different emotions, but I would say that my biggest takeaway is disappointment.
I'm pretty young, being in my late twenties, but I know that the largest Reddit demographic is younger than me. And it terrifies me to see that people who are probably less than 15 years younger than me appear to be far more stricken by toxic masculinity than I was when I was their age. Right now the top response is a story about someone scratching his friend's back during a military deployment. He later mentions that his comrades gave him a hard time for it. Is the idea of machismo so fragile that we cannot take simple actions - even to provide relief to a friend?
I'll be the first to admit that a single AskReddit thread is not going to be an accurate representation of the levels of intimacy men actually give each other. But the simple fact that it's full of jokes, to me, makes it appear that they are using humor as a defense mechanism.
The fact that young men have so many barriers preventing them from building bonds with other men in a society often partitioned by gender deeply concerns me. I worry that this is the beginning of a societal issue in the same vein as racism was for our parents and grandparents and will only cause more problems as we age and gain political sway.
I'm bringing this up here because I would like some perspective on this. I've always been very sympathetic to other people, and my views as a gay man are obviously going to be different from straight men. Where is this toxicity coming from? Is there a way we can stop it, or is it already ingrained in the collective psyche?
29 votes -
Toxic masculinity: Helping men understand the impact of their behaviour
45 votes -
The fantastic masculinity of Newt Scamander
11 votes -
The fantastic masculinity of Newt Scamander
4 votes -
Toxic danger to boys when men fail to step up
5 votes -
Robert Webb on the toxicity of masculinity
12 votes